|
|
Hard drive profile
|
Date added: |
2004-11-23 |
Posted by: |
total |
Brand: |
Hitachi |
Firmware: |
N/A |
Model number: |
HDS728080PLAT20 |
Manufacture date: |
N/A |
Model name / serie: |
N/A |
Buffersize: |
N/A |
Drive size: |
80 GB |
RPM: |
7200 |
XBOX version: |
Unk. |
Progam(s): |
hdlock |
|
|
|
Additional notes: |
|
Report this entry - Edit |
None |
Comments
#1 - posted by
(192.99.2.*) | 2014-01-06 09:43:24 |
What I mean by symbol count is the numebr of times the symbol shows up in the dump from all the object files. The symbol for a particular template function will show up in the output from each object file in which it is used. So if the example function above, template int Read( ), is only called from one place, its symbol count will be 1. If it is called from 100 different .cpp files in the application, however, its symbol count will be 100 and, as far as the compiler is concerned, it is a 100 times bigger deal. |
#2 - posted by
(186.202.13*.*) | 2014-01-07 22:26:28 |
Brown vs. Board of Education decision of 1954 that<a href="http://soghhofgw.com"> deeclrad</a> unconstitutional the racial segregation of public schools. Separate schools for black and white children are inherently unequal, Chief Justice Earl Warren said in an opinion that helped launch the civil-rights movement.LocalLinks State-enforced segregation laws are long gone, but for school officials today, a key question remains: Did the historic decision commit them to a policy of seeking integrated schools, or did it tell them not to assign students to a school based on their race?Today, lawyers in a pair of integration cases will debate whether school boards may use racial guidelines to assign students. Both sides will rely on the Brown decision to make their case. In Seattle, the school board adopted a policy, now suspended, that gave nonwhite students an edge if they sought to enroll in a popular, mostly white high school. In Jefferson County, Ky., which includes Louisville, the school district said black children should make up between 15 percent and 50 percent of the enrollment at each elementary school. In both cities, several white parents sued to have the plans<a href="http://soghhofgw.com"> deeclrad</a> unconstitutional after their children were barred from enrolling in the school of their choice because of their race. Although they lost in the lower courts, the Supreme Court voted in June to hear their appeals, leading many to predict the justices are poised to outlaw racial balancing in the public schools. At its core, the issue here is the promise made 52 years ago in Brown vs. Board of Education, said Theodore Shaw, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's Legal Defense Fund, which won the ruling that struck down racial segregation in the South. Mandatory desegregation is now a thing of the past. All that's left is voluntary desegregation, and now that is being challenged. Bush administration lawyers, who joined the case on the side of the parents, say the Brown decision sought to move the United States toward a color-blind policy. They say school officials may not open or close the door to particular students solely because of race. In short, race-based decisions are racial discrimination, even if the officials are pursuing a laudable goal, they say. |
|