RivAngE
Full Member
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Activity: 728
Merit: 169
What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger
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January 06, 2019, 08:17:11 PM |
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I see some nice green candles! However I won't believe for a bullrun until we a day closes with +50%.
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Paashaas
Legendary
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Activity: 3529
Merit: 4601
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January 06, 2019, 08:19:07 PM |
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Amazing image from the dark side of the moon, accomplished by the Chinese.
No reports about alien sites which has been claimed by tin foil hatters all those years...lol.
ftfy Didn't you know that aliens constructed those megalithic sites on Earth, not the moon.
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bitserve
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1477
Self made HODLER ✓
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January 06, 2019, 08:24:24 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.
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vapourminer
Legendary
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Activity: 4466
Merit: 4007
what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?
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January 06, 2019, 08:24:48 PM |
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Remember stuffing DIMMs in a PCI (pre-PCIe) card for a faster boot?
Yes. Also AT bus cards. Though they were DIPs at the time. S-100 for the win!
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Biodom
Legendary
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Activity: 3892
Merit: 4332
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January 06, 2019, 08:25:17 PM |
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Allow me a potentially controversial statement:
The cryptoqueeen Bringing balance to the group We need more females
thanks, makes no difference in the count, though.
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lightfoot
Legendary
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Activity: 3164
Merit: 2258
I fix broken miners. And make holes in teeth :-)
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January 06, 2019, 08:33:46 PM |
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Remember stuffing DIMMs in a PCI (pre-PCIe) card for a faster boot?
Yes. Also AT bus cards. Though they were DIPs at the time. S-100 for the win! UNIBUS, only way to go. Also had the failed unibus address register (FUBAR) which basically told the programmer they were fucked.
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Arriemoller
Legendary
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Activity: 2282
Merit: 1767
Cлaвa Укpaїнi!
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January 06, 2019, 08:34:32 PM |
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One more haiku Roach making noises Best thread is getting boring Long sideways market
Roach. Angry noises. The Jews did Nine-Eleven. Bitcoin really sucks. W.O. Thread micg and company almost finishing Mic getting hammerd Wodka martini +-4 red wines Dessert whiskey or irish coffee still nerds to come Maybe gonna look for a JEW in antwerp a religious one and give him a F***ing HUG Still not selling any of me coins #F***ed up saturdayFor sure Eddie gets my last merit this evening Must be Hero as fast as possible Worst haiku ever Micg too drunk to write No more merits That haiku is wrong I was very sleepy then Will correct it now Worst haiku ever Micgoosens too drunk to write No more merits sent
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P_Shep
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1795
Merit: 1208
This is not OK.
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January 06, 2019, 08:36:37 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. And just like that, his hard-on for big-blocks becomes entirely clear! Man's gotta make a livin'...
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d_eddie
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2632
Merit: 3441
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Out of merits now Merit sources where art thou I need more merits
Mmmm bones didn’t you had a double upgrade of stashes Tried to make a haiku of it .... But still need to try better cause still not getting it Next one must be spot on before posting My well of source merits is overflowing at the moment. However, I have to guard against being too generous and carefree. Don't want to see a bunch of sour grapes bitching showing up in Meta and reputation boards about my meriting behavior. Goose is still wining and dining his fair lady, whiners keep whining.
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HairyMaclairy
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1414
Merit: 2174
Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
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January 06, 2019, 08:38:27 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail
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d_eddie
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2632
Merit: 3441
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January 06, 2019, 08:39:34 PM |
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Bob's penis is green, And Jimbo's going down South. Bullish or bearish?
Out of merits now Merit sources where art thou I need more merits
My favorites in the last bunch EDIT: and this! Nearly escaped me. Allow me a potentially controversial statement:
The cryptoqueen Bringing balance to the group We need more females
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bitserve
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1477
Self made HODLER ✓
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January 06, 2019, 08:39:57 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?
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HairyMaclairy
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1414
Merit: 2174
Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist
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January 06, 2019, 08:42:32 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail I am retarded... what does that mean in this case? Of course he believes in big blocks. He is a mass storage engineer. To him, the solution to all (most) problems is more storage. Edits: Ask a lawyer how to fix Bitcoin and they will say you need to build in AML. Ask a banker how to fix Bitcoin and they will tell you you need a central permissioning authority. Ask an accountant and they will tell you you need an API to the IRS. Ask a mass storage engineer and get a mass storage solution..... Big blocks are just another form of mass storage.
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JimboToronto
Legendary
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Activity: 4144
Merit: 4786
You're never too old to think young.
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January 06, 2019, 08:43:34 PM |
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Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.
Sorry. I had no intent at doxxing him. I 'd already figured out he was one of the more technologically knowledgeable and experienced people here. I was just curious about his implied involvement in SSD development. SSDs were my biggest source of tech fascination a dozen years ago. Then I discovered Bitcoin.
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P_Shep
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1795
Merit: 1208
This is not OK.
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January 06, 2019, 08:47:02 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail I am retarded... what does that mean in this case? Of course he believes in big blocks. He is a mass storage engineer. To him, more storage is easy and the answer to all (most) problems. So we can safely ignore anything he has to say about big block forks as his opinion is massively biased by his profession. Which is fair enough.
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bitserve
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1477
Self made HODLER ✓
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January 06, 2019, 08:47:48 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail I am retarded... what does that mean in this case? Of course he believes in big blocks. He is a mass storage engineer. To him, the solution to all (most) problems is more storage. Big blocks are just a form of more storage. Ask a lawyer how to fix Bitcoin and they will say you need to build in AML. Ask a banker how to fix Bitcoin and they will tell you you need a central permissioning authority. Ah yeah, I have already made some subtle joke to him about Bcash and mass storage in the past....
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d_eddie
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2632
Merit: 3441
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January 06, 2019, 08:49:19 PM |
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Passive Mod Mode: Off Trolls will not be allowed to completely derail the thread.
I guess there are better things to do in the holiday season, or in winter weekends, or in weekends or weekdays or whenever, but thank you for a usually thankless job, felt more than noticed by most (including me).
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jojo69
Legendary
Online
Activity: 3290
Merit: 4534
diamond-handed zealot
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January 06, 2019, 08:49:20 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. And just like that, his hard-on for big-blocks becomes entirely clear! Man's gotta make a livin'... LOLOL! a clear conflict of interest
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xhomerx10
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3976
Merit: 8638
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January 06, 2019, 08:49:30 PM |
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I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later ? ? ? What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military? I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history. I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices. It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs. Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect. To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail I am retarded... what does that mean in this case? I am retarded What does that mean in this case? Five more syllables.
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