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Tag: paradox
The Haswell paradox: The best CPU in the world unless youre a PC enthusiast
2013-06-05 18:40:20| Extremetech
Intel's Haswell is a bit of a puzzle. On the one hand, this is the fastest single-threaded chip in the world -- but on the other, it's hard to get excited about a chip that's only a few percent faster, consumes more power, and has weaker overclocking potential than its predecessor. Where did it all go wrong for the master chip maker?
Product Launch - CANADA: Big Rock Brewery's Paradox Dark Light Ale, Purple Gas
2013-04-05 12:35:42| Daily beverage news and comment - from just-drinks.com
Big Rock Brewery has launched two new beers as part of its summer-season 15-can multipack, Swingers Pack.
Tags: product
big
canada
light
New Silicon Valley in the Andes: Promise and paradox
2013-03-27 08:00:00| CNET News.com
special report In part two of a four-part series, Crave's Eric Mack delves into the ways Ecuador's ambitious "City of Knowledge" could change Latin America -- and the wider tech world. [Read more]
Tags: valley
promise
silicon
silicon valley
Coal And Coral: Australia's Self-Destructive Paradox
2013-03-23 11:17:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
National Public Radio: NPR Science Correspondent Richard Harris traveled to Australia's Great Barrier Reef to find out how the coral reefs are coping with increased water temperature and increasing ocean acidity, brought about by our burning of fossil fuels. Day 5: A return to shore finds that people prefer cars to corals. It's not every day you open an in-flight magazine and read an ad touting "spitwater pressure cleaners for the mining industry." Flip the page and you'll also see an ad cajoling you to "snorkel, sip,...
Tags: coal
coral
paradox
australias
Ice Bubbles May Solve Carbon-Temperature Paradox
2013-02-28 21:30:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Climate Central: Scientists may have resolved a long-standing puzzle in climate science by showing that ancient increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide came at the same time as rising temperatures, rather than hundreds of years afterward. In a new analysis of bubbles trapped in Antarctic ice, published Thursday in Science, lead author Frederic Parrenin of the Laboratory of Glaciology and Geophysics of the Environment, in Grenoble, France, and his colleagues write that at the end of the last ice age, about 20,000...
Tags: ice
solve
paradox
bubbles