Ympc IT needs a voice in the privacy debate
When it comes to research and development for new products, time matters. And multiverse simula
owala website tions can shave off years from start to final product. Just ask the military. Apparently, during the pandemic, I spent so much time-consuming digital content, I stopped reading print magazines. Last weekend I tried to catch up on reading my Popular Mechanics magazines mdash; from 2021 mdash; and one article blew my mind a bit. The story, How the Air Force Secretly Designed and Flew a New Fighter in a Year herersquo another piece on the topic from DefenseNews , described how simulations helped designers go from concept to viable, finished product in a fraction of the time it once took to conceive, model, build, test, re-test and then risk death as pilots worked the bugs out of the design.In simulation, you can safely crash the jet an unlimited number of times with no lives lost and deliver a product that, even in its initial prototype form, is likely far safer to fly than many production aircraft. This was with technology thatrsquo
stanley cup now two years old in a segment we now loosely call the metaverse mdash; and itrsquo advancing incredibly quickly. It suggests that the time needed to design and buil
stanley cup d almost any product is being massively compressed.Letrsquo talk about how simulation increases the speed of innovation. The OmniverseThe platform Irsquo;m most familiar with thatrsquo in heavy use for simulation is Nvidiarsquo Omniverse Nvidia is a client Xpab Microsoft s Windows Phone 8.1 update takes Cortana to China, UK, and three other countries
Ruling another win for record and film companies In another blow to peer-to-peer file sharing, a federal judge ruled on Wednesday that the Morpheus software program encouraged users to infringe upon copyrighted works. StreamCast Networks Inc., the owner of Morpheus, cannot seriously argue that it did not know that the popular music and movies traded on its network were copyrighted, wrote U.S. District Judge Stephen V. Wilson.The ruling is another win for record and film companies, which sought an injunction against distribution of the file-sharin
stanley cup g software in the suit, filed in 2001. StreamCast continued to fight after two other companies named in the suit, Grokster Ltd. and Sharman Networks Ltd., the company behind the Kazaa file-sharing client, reach settlements with the entertainment industry. Streamcast said it could consider appealing, saying the software has legal uses.
polene fr We do not believe that StreamCast encouraged users to infringe on copyrighted works, and the company ne
polene sac ver intended to do so, the company said in a statement.File-sharing software companies have been battered by a string of successful legal suits by the entertainment industry. In June 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court found that both Grokster and Streamcast could be held liable for copyright infringements by users. Earlier this month, MetaMachine Inc., which distributed the eDonkey client software, settled a copy infringement case with the record industry for $30 million.Just weeks