Knowing this, workers and visitors often take photographs of special bits of graffiti, so the words will live on.
The kidney cells were forced to take up bits of DNA using a technique invented in 1973 that used a calcium solution.
Brokers already take big bits of business and split them between individual companies, Lloyd's and other markets such as Bermuda (where rather than using a subscription model, the lead insurer often subcontracts risk to peers).
In another talk at Black Hat, researchers Don Bailey and Nick Depetrillo showed how they were able to take bits and pieces of mobile information (such as the IMSI), Caller Display Name (CNAM) and the Home Location Register (HLR) to put together a mobile White Pages that would allow them to stalk someone.
"You can maybe take bits and pieces" of various storms over the past century, and say "these are analogous, " says Prof.
What Starkweather wanted to do was take the array of bits and bytes, ones and zeros that constitute digital images, and transfer them straight into the guts of a copier.
The thinking is that the bits of the banks that lend to and take deposits from British households and small businesses need special protection, by being financially and legally separate from the rest of the firm.
In India and elsewhere, consumers once resigned to choking down bits of bark or fistfuls of leaves can now take traditional medicine in more palatable forms - pills, potions and powders.
This world of bits is a strange one, in which you can take something and still leave it for its rightful owner.
ABB's best trick is its ability to take electric current of any voltage and frequency, chop it up into tiny bits and reassemble it into the form needed.
Take the updating of Wikipedia, or the mere fact that any arbitrary string of bits can be written, copied, and rewritten with full fidelity.
For color images, each pixel contains 24 bits of information, meaning that, uncompressed, even this very grainy picture would take up an entire megabyte of computer memory.
应用推荐