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Yes of course you know that all....better...
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Not just me.
Anyone who had basic education.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Ehr.. let me check..
"No".
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Just think you omniscient unicellular organism: If you were allergic to Morphine, where would you be now? Try to get your one cell to think!
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0x01AA wrote: If you were allergic to Morphine, where would you be now? I'd be ded. Very; been a month since I kicked the habit.
So, your wife is allergic to RNA?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Now, one can not say she is allergic to RNA (not proved, how? she would have to risk that). But she does react very allergic to a lot of meds very strange.
a.) Vaccinations like against ticks -> Very serious recations
b.) Antibiotics needed because of an (simple knee) operation -> Very serious recations
Why she should risk anything which is rarely tested?
[Edit]
And sorry for my aggression above
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0x01AA wrote: Antibiotics needed because of an (simple knee) operation -> Very serious recations I can only light a candle for her. Did.
0x01AA wrote: And sorry for my aggression above You have the right to.
My respect to you.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Eddy Vluggen wrote: So, your wife is allergic to RNA?
Absolutely not, she'd be dead already if she was.
But the RNA is encapsulated in lipids so it can survive until it can reach a cell (RNA is highly unstable), some people might be allergic to those lipids.
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Quote: Much better than 99% of those vaccinated! Hm ... where did you get that figure?
The vast majority of people I know to be vaccinated are behaving sensibly and still following other precautions. It could be better I agree, and of course, my observations might be influenced by the fact I tend to hang around with sensible people and avoid idiots like the ... oh ... was going to say "plague" but I guess that's outdated now . I'll "avoid idiots like Covid" from now on I think
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Reasonable and unvaccinated is an oxymoron.
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
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It's just entertainment
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You have no clue to how many systems are still running on mainframes.
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I was referring to the COBOL part
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There are computerized systems that need to permit tens of thousands — if not hundreds of thousands — of users to access it simultaneously.
Examples would be banks, airlines (for reservation systems), stock brokerages, etc.
In all of these instances, the amount of I/O bandwidth required is enormous.
Mainframes happen to be designed with this in mind since the 1960s.
The IBM/360 series (now, the Z series) had a maximum of 16 channels in its largest configurations on its biggest processors.
There were byte multiplexor channels for handling slow character-at-a-time input devices (terminals) and selector channels which talked to tape drives, disk drives, printers and such high-speed devices. The maximum speed on a selector channel used to be 16 MB/sec.
A few years ago when I checked, you could have 64 channels s(c/t)reaming at 256 MB/sec. I am sure both the number of channels and the throughput per channel have gone up since then.
Most commercial data processing requires high I/O bandwidth because the applications are I/O bound, not compute bound.
There is no point in increasing the MIPS ( million instructions per second) rate if you can’t get data in and out fast.
You can try and find out the maximum I/O throughput on your favorite PC or Unix box and see how it is dwarfed by mainframes.
I blame your lack of knowledge about these matters on the educational system.
Learning about the design of Intel processors, ARM chips, RISC chips, etc., is not learning about computer architecture.
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tl;dr
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There's now "object-oriented" COBOL. With storage redefinition, "records", sort, merge, embedded SQL, strong typing ... it's still ahead of some "modern" languages (and faster).
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
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Interviewer: How much milk do these cows give?
Farmer: Which one? The Black one or the brown one?
Interviewer: Brown one.
Farmer: A couple of liters per day.
Interviewer: And the black one?
Farmer: A couple of liters per day.
Interviewer (naturally a bit flummoxed): I see. What do you give them to eat?
Farmer: Which one? Black or brown?
Interviewer: Black.
Farmer: It eats grass.
Interviewer: And the other one?
Farmer: Grass.
Interviewer (now annoyed): Why do you keep asking which one when the answers are the same?!
Farmer: Because the black one’s mine.
Interviewer: Oh, and the brown one?
Farmer: It’s also mine
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Me too!
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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Back in 2018 I had to add a certificate to a website hosted on an Azure App Service.
Buying a certificate, generating a key, whatever, I don't know anymore, it was a lot of work.
I'm a developer, I don't know how certificates work and I don't really want to do that kind of stuff.
A year later, in 2019, the certificate expired and I had to install a new one.
Needless to say, I went looking for alternatives to buying and installing a new certificate every year.
I found an App Service plugin that uses Let's Encrypt that should automagically refresh my free certificate every few months.
The refreshing never worked for whatever reason, so I'm still refreshing that certificate every six months, although it's just a few button clicks, so it's easier than it was.
Then at the end of 2019 I got a newsletter saying App Services could now create and refresh Let's Encrypt certificates with a single button click!
It worked and I was happy, but not all was good.
Only subdomains were supported for some reason and I still had a website that does not have a subdomain.
Yesterday, I needed to install yet another certificate on another website that also does not have a subdomain.
And then I found out App Services now supports creating and refreshing Let's Encrypt certificates for bare domains as well!
All my certificate woes are now solved with the click of a single button and I am happy!
Azure really is a delight
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