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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Friday May 10, 2024
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  • ...DL]], please contact the Centiare [[User_talk:Centiare|administrator]] for access.'' ...d Disk]]s), ''One-transistor dynamic RAM (DRAM)'' ([[Dynamic random access memory]]), ''Reduced Instruction Set Computer'' ([[RISC]]) architecture, [[Relatio
    2 KB (261 words) - 02:59, 11 December 2006
  • ...[[machine]], usually a [[computer]]. As a content of [[memory (computers)|memory]], software in principle can be changed without the adjustment to the stati ...reading different sequences of instructions into the [[Memory (computers)|memory]] of a device to control computations was invented by [[Charles Babbage]] a
    14 KB (2,076 words) - 13:33, 31 October 2012
  • ...es on the other hand provide faster access but can consume huge amounts of memory if the graph is very large. * [[Random graph|Probabilistic graph theory]]
    17 KB (2,473 words) - 11:44, 6 September 2007
  • ...] may all perform the same tasks, as long as time and [[Memory (computers)|memory]] capacity are not considerations. Therefore, the same computer designs may ...e) computation, [[Binary numeral system|binary]] numbers, and regenerative memory; the secret British [[Colossus computer]] (demonstrated in 1943), which had
    39 KB (5,822 words) - 02:44, 11 December 2006
  • ...dying DHCP [42,33,17,25,39,7,27], we solve this riddle simply by emulating access points [30,20]. In the end, note that CheckWornil is derived from the deplo ...ce from DARPA's millenium testbed. Similarly, we removed 2GB/s of Internet access from our Internet-2 overlay network to examine our desktop machines [4]. We
    22 KB (3,111 words) - 20:01, 28 September 2007
  • ...DL]], please contact the Centiare [[User_talk:Centiare|administrator]] for access.'' ...skii|I.S. Shklovskii]] coauthor, ''[[Intelligent Life in the Universe]]''. Random House, 1966, 509 pgs
    41 KB (6,217 words) - 14:43, 24 October 2007
  • ...dp/B006EWUO22 121 dollars. And that is Corsair, the cheapest, crappiest memory on the market. 23:50 < Dcoetzee> mareklug: I for one do not enjoy random memory errors :-P
    56 KB (8,396 words) - 23:47, 20 January 2015
  • ...or '''Slant Top''' slot machines include a stool so the player has sitdown access. '''Stand Up''' or '''Upright''' slot machines are played while standing. ...ent 4448419),<ref>{{US patent|4448419|Electronic gaming device utilizing a random number generator for selecting the reel stop positions}}</ref> which states
    78 KB (12,579 words) - 01:41, 2 January 2018
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    61 KB (8,711 words) - 17:38, 30 July 2016
  • ...t wastes even /more/ revision ids and log entry ids by deleting it, making random accesses slower. ...] <kim_bruning> derpofoooo, ah, it's a content spammer. can you physically access the machine, or the switch it is connected to?
    101 KB (12,825 words) - 23:08, 24 January 2015
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    68 KB (9,798 words) - 12:28, 17 May 2014
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    68 KB (9,798 words) - 12:30, 17 May 2014
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    68 KB (9,798 words) - 12:29, 17 May 2014
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    56 KB (8,031 words) - 13:29, 28 January 2018
  • [21:18] <Tannerbaum> what we have now is: checkuser access, no ads, though very small donations requested (About $5 from each wiki eac [21:26] <harej> Shell access?
    88 KB (11,350 words) - 03:04, 24 January 2015
  • ...(1966),''Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One'', Random House, New York, pp. 93-94</ref> As a graduate student in astronomy at th ...etical studies have shown that a skillful croupier can by virtue of muscle memory release the roulette ball with a speed and at a location on the table to bi
    76 KB (11,051 words) - 17:10, 3 October 2022
  • [14:00] <James_F> SudoGhost> Now "We have blacked-out access to Wikipedia for today to show what might happen." [14:50] <tommorris> I'm seeing him IRL tomorrow, so if I haven't gotten access, I'll pour beer over his head
    73 KB (9,060 words) - 20:54, 14 January 2015
  • [00:13] <sonia> he spent his time in auckland photographing random stuff [00:14] <LauraHale> http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/HOPAU/W2G is random promoting for Aussies. ;)
    97 KB (11,684 words) - 20:55, 14 January 2015
  • ...related discussion I have seen here in a long time :P Most times is some random tangent ;) [20:55] <MooCow93> Snowolf: Well, maybe it was Michael. My memory is foggy. I'm trying to find the quote/anecdote/story.
    112 KB (15,229 words) - 03:09, 24 January 2015
  • [17:48] <petan> unfortunatelly he doesn't have access to cluster [19:22] <Malinaccier> Is it targeted to random users only?
    81 KB (10,530 words) - 03:10, 24 January 2015
  • ...memory: I had 32 meg, now… https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/105918205/memory%20on%20IIci.jpg 14:55 < Carly> Bradford I dont get access to my laptop,sorry
    158 KB (22,923 words) - 01:00, 21 January 2015
  • [00:00] <balrog> if I turn off JS I can access WP [00:11] <SMasters> I can still access my watchlist. Not that there's anything new to see.
    292 KB (37,342 words) - 15:30, 14 January 2015
  • 15:14 < Qcoder00> ibendix: What do you intend doing that means mass access? ...oup, I also thing they need to be approved by the Wikimedia Foundation for access as it does avoid the need of a RfA-like process.
    161 KB (23,610 words) - 21:43, 23 January 2015
  • 12:46 < Frood> it's joined a bunch of random channels 12:46 < Frood> not really random
    205 KB (29,645 words) - 00:15, 24 January 2015
  • [16:36] <MuZemike> Well, given that they won't let you access IRC on their 3G network opens that up to other competitors. ...to get around because they also provide a free VPN that you could use for random crap
    91 KB (11,844 words) - 03:12, 24 January 2015
  • ...igmaWP> Fluffernutter: I'm not sure what to do with LL2's mass addition of random pages to ClueBot's optin [22:07] <la_pianista> I should never have been given internet access as a fourteen-year-old.
    73 KB (9,101 words) - 23:20, 24 January 2015
  • 01:16 < Dcoetzee> Random neat image: http://www.popehat.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ThePopulation ...Tokyo-fires-water-cannons-against-Taipei-in-Diaoyu-/-Senkakuwar-25907.html random google result on what I'm talking about.
    133 KB (19,262 words) - 21:45, 23 January 2015
  • [18:49] <tommorris> ..with OTRS access too ;-) [19:02] <Fluttershy-ENG> Pissing In Public Access!
    239 KB (30,402 words) - 15:30, 14 January 2015
  • [17:21] <FooBarMartijn> Steven_Zhang, no random words without context! [17:21] <FooBarMartijn> Steven_Zhang, no random words without contextONE
    125 KB (17,171 words) - 03:02, 24 January 2015
  • ...r less than what Apple is charging. Of course, you don't NEED Apple-grade memory. 00:01 < Dcoetzee> "Apple-grade memory"? Apple ships standard white label RAM as far as I know.
    250 KB (36,347 words) - 23:46, 20 January 2015
  • 05:36 < Jetro> a bit random 08:58 < mareklug> wctaiwan how much memory, both real and virtual, does Textual swell up to on your machine, in your e
    168 KB (24,759 words) - 21:51, 23 January 2015
  • ...out neurology. Why do they present their own theories regarding learning, memory, thinking, mental illness, emotion, consciousness, neurology, motivation, l ...e argues that NLP makes claims and posits explanations regarding learning, memory, thinking, mental illness, motivation, neurology and physiology, and so its
    209 KB (33,239 words) - 17:04, 25 September 2008
  • 12:19 < mysterytrey> So why is wikipedia so fond of random shades of beige? 12:21 < Mdann52> Because we're all random :2
    200 KB (28,782 words) - 00:12, 24 January 2015
  • ...eeTylerToe> No, I mean, say some asian company sells 100,000 units of some random appliance with your code. It's not like someone flicks on the bat signal 23:34 < Dcoetzee> Or with access to reference material, in this case
    101 KB (14,771 words) - 02:58, 16 August 2015
  • ...purpose of knowledge acquisition. Chief among these are the faculties of memory and imagination, which operate in closely coordinated representation spaces The purpose of memory, on the other hand, requires states that can be duly constituted in fashion
    226 KB (34,541 words) - 14:20, 20 August 2016
  • 09:55 < Jetro> just click random article on wikipedia 14:33 <@Spitfire> GorillaWarfare, type random shit and pretend you know what you're doing.
    209 KB (29,996 words) - 21:15, 23 January 2015
  • 11:13 < dtm_> TheDruId: i dont even know how to actually access the redirect. i dont know how to derive the url of the page that it's at. ...is too much of an infringement on the rights of those who rightfully have access to this data to restrict their ability to analyze it for that reason
    197 KB (28,949 words) - 00:20, 21 January 2015
  • [16:19] <lucasoutloud> Oh. I've been clicking the random button on xkcd all day and I haven't hit that one. ...ugh a lonely field of abandoned characters. ever so quietly, a few bits of random punctuation moved a fraction of an inch. you approach closer, thinking you'
    130 KB (16,408 words) - 03:03, 24 January 2015
  • ...SoapX> i heard someone allege that Chrome sends a list of all the URLs you access to Google 08:16 < happarappa> I will instantly remember it when I see it, but my memory has a habit of changing things around.
    236 KB (34,593 words) - 21:41, 23 January 2015
  • 13:28 < Carly> I have to access from my laptop to translate ...set into S3 involved firing up an instance, attaching a volume with enough memory, installing a command line tool for s3 and then running s3get, gunzip and s
    164 KB (23,711 words) - 00:58, 21 January 2015
  • ...help. To find an operator for a particular channel, type "/quote chanserv access #channel list". [16:48] <Maryana> other random stuff, too, but i'm sure those already exist in commons
    193 KB (25,713 words) - 04:47, 24 January 2015
  • ...n on a dynamic (or rather any) IP. Now does that mean that I am allowed to access the login page but can't successfully log in to on a non-IP block excempt a 09:15 < Dcoetzee> smtchahal1: You can always access the log in page and even log in, even with a blocked user.
    271 KB (39,658 words) - 21:21, 23 January 2015
  • [21:35] <SigmaWP> let me protect a random page [22:37] <eeekster> now if they'd just fix the memory leaks...
    106 KB (13,708 words) - 03:12, 24 January 2015
  • 03:18 -!- Stove [~Stove@178-116-204-28.access.telenet.be] has joined #wikipedia-en 07:29 < TeeTylerToe> in my memory the images were better
    211 KB (30,290 words) - 00:10, 24 January 2015
  • ...7 < Ironholds> Isarra: NOINDEXing new pages, BLP-PROD, wider people having access to AFT5 13:56 < MartijnH> or they are off-line sources I can't access
    223 KB (32,353 words) - 00:09, 24 January 2015
  • 00:48 < IDoH> Most random porn I ever suh ...cuit: The point is that tertiary sources can be RS. But sources written by random guys with no screening are not.
    212 KB (29,779 words) - 00:03, 24 January 2015
  • [17:49] <mabdul> BarkingFish: do you have your ACC tool access back? [19:03] <{Soap}> is it supposed to be random, e.g. it only appears 1/10 of the time?
    144 KB (18,933 words) - 03:16, 24 January 2015
  • 10:54 < Mdann52> List if edit requests is.... Very random.... 10:56 < Isarra> Why is it not working on a random talkpage now?
    280 KB (41,482 words) - 00:14, 24 January 2015
  • ...h you blocked him indefinitely on that page. Mind reinstating his talkpage access? ...rToe> the admin who blocked me indefinitely, and then blocked my talk page access
    311 KB (45,183 words) - 00:15, 24 January 2015
  • 08:21 < AnuraB> CPU:pentium(r) dual-core e5200 @ 2.50ghz Memory:2039MB In-use:67% Display:1152X864 Microsoft Windows XP Professional Servic ...< TheDruId> NotASpy, no, but I trust the US legal system, including any 12 random jurors.
    185 KB (26,979 words) - 02:54, 16 August 2015
  • 11:07 < Isarra> So there's just a random image description in the article. 15:27 < Qcoder02> BarkingFish: Do you have access to Gimp or photoshop?
    235 KB (34,105 words) - 00:11, 24 January 2015
  • May 06 06:15:10 <Kafkaesque> "Continue"? I'll stick to my random and irreverent interjections that go no where and add nothing. May 06 11:22:18 <ftwtf> how do you view/access them at all, wctaiwan?
    297 KB (40,196 words) - 02:15, 25 January 2015
  • 04:21 < Revent> You should just pick some random glyph and be "The island formerly known as the Republic of China" :P 06:37 < ToAruShiroiNeko> ChrisGualtieri probably also no ofline access to japanese magazines that cover some of those topics
    238 KB (34,200 words) - 21:38, 23 January 2015
  • ...on and one of the secretive OTRS cabal will decide whether you should have access. 00:54 < dtm_> mareklug_: yeah great, so you'll run linux on a random custom hybrid architecture huh ;)
    231 KB (33,831 words) - 00:21, 21 January 2015
  • 11:10 < AzaToth> I can access 23.23.110.58 from here at home fine 14:54 -!- Stove [~Stove@178-116-204-28.access.telenet.be] has joined #wikipedia-en
    222 KB (32,199 words) - 00:09, 24 January 2015
  • 05:42 < Mdann52> Sorry, random outburst there ...ny_Sidaway_> That obesity disproportionately afflicts those without secure access to food is telling.
    222 KB (32,447 words) - 00:13, 24 January 2015
  • [16:08] <Aranda56> i'm getting memory loss and headaches, that isn't good ...to see the site", which is even worse than "we're arbitrarily cutting off access for everyone"
    168 KB (20,762 words) - 20:22, 14 January 2015
  • they may have little surplus memory capacity to memorandize the big picture, of modifiable memory contents.
    665 KB (109,541 words) - 02:46, 13 September 2010
  • ...or a ''consummate POV'' of the agent involved. Still, the only points of access and the only paths of approach that an agent can have to its own consummate ...re general subspace of the total memory space, in other words, a subset of memory that can be treated, under the appropriate change of coordinates, as being
    725 KB (109,715 words) - 18:09, 28 August 2014
  • 08:25 < AzaToth> Technical_13: theres a memory bug in jsminmax.php ...tempted to legally change own name to "attention" and demand payment from random people
    193 KB (27,290 words) - 00:59, 21 January 2015
  • ...involves surgery in a theatre, then it's unlikely that they'd be provided access. [11:45] <PeterSymonds> Yeah just pretend it was a random outburst.
    1.71 MB (227,625 words) - 19:00, 8 February 2015
  • [17:11] <DustinVS> I don't think it's be super-great having to endure random IPs trying to get you desysopped [23:18] <NotASpy> there was a Main Page protection bot at one point, if memory serves, but it would crash and leave the Main Page vulnerable to unprotecte
    971 KB (120,204 words) - 00:04, 10 July 2015
  • This started out as an attempt to track down a 30 year old memory, access to the microfilm manuscripts of Peirce's nachlass
    594 KB (95,507 words) - 17:36, 14 July 2017
  • [21:53] <Isarra> Wikipedia needs more long random articles. ...eWikipedian> always keep a spare OS installation handy that you can use to access files off the master.
    1.63 MB (214,268 words) - 16:57, 8 February 2015
  • May 01 12:45:22 <Hedgehog456> I'm a random hedgehog. May 02 05:32:53 <CR90> RANDOM PATRIOTIC MOMENT: America wins, bitches! :D
    1.58 MB (215,511 words) - 23:33, 28 January 2015