
SS198LF : r/57x28mm - Reddit
Aug 7, 2023 · IMO penetration depths are more of a priority. I could look past it as mentioned given 198's velocities, but that's why BDF and T6B have the edge. They penetrate to 16-18", while having …
Understanding an ip address if is private or public>
Understanding an ip address if is private or public> Is the following ip address 198.168.30.40 public or private? Or this could be a typo in my learning manual! Thanks
What can I do to prepare for 344 and 213? Should I even take ... - Reddit
Nov 7, 2023 · I am a 3rd year student planning on majoring in CS, and am considering taking both 01:198:344 (Design and analysis of computer algorithms) and 01:198:213 (Software methodology) …
Beyond RFC1918: Additional ranges for private use
Nov 15, 2016 · For most organizations, even very large ones, the standard RFC1918 address ranges of 10.0.0.0 /8, 172.16.0.0 /12, and 192.168.0.0 /16 provide more than enough usable space to address …
CS classes by difficulty : r/rutgers - Reddit
Dec 14, 2020 · But I have never seen anyone rank the difficulty of the required classes. CS : 01:198:111, 112, 205, 206, 211, 344. Math : 01:640:151 (Calc 1), 152 (Calc 2), 250 (Linear Algebra. I …
Download links for every CapCut Desktop version (Windows) : r
Sep 21, 2023 · truer/CapCut Current search is within r/CapCut Remove r/CapCut filter and expand search to all of Reddit
r/rutgers on Reddit: Thoughts on Data 101 (01:198:142) vs Data ...
Thoughts on Data 101 (01:198:142) vs Data Management for Data Science (01:198:210)? What do you guys think would be a better class to take? Seems like 210 is a new class to my knowledge and …
NCO EPB : r/AirForce - Reddit
Jan 16, 2024 · truer/AirForce Current search is within r/AirForce Remove r/AirForce filter and expand search to all of Reddit
Easy CS electives? For Spring 2024 : r/rutgers - Reddit
Nov 10, 2023 · There are approved math and philosophy courses you can take as CS electives, but you can only take 2 total and count them towards electives. Minds, Machines, Persons is the easiest. …
So apparently 150ms is the average reaction time of a gamer ... - Reddit
Is Nvidia trying to tell me that the "typcal gamer" reaction time when most of them are on 60hz panels is 150ms?