After you're done reading a book, you put it down, and maybe never even read it again. After you read 100 resumes, and pick a couple to talk to the people you have to hire someone. That someone will be in your life for the forseable future. It makes the consequence of picking a bad or--even worse--a mediocre candidate a serious decision. Its much worse to hire a mediocre employee because it will take you longer to figure out they are no good, and even longer to get rid of them.
Yes, but side loading is installing another piece of software. My point was just because you can do something--such as install an app from a different repo, or install a different web browser on an OS--doesn't mean that you don't have a monopoly.
Please note, you could install a different browser then IE6 on windows 95/98, but that did not stop the anti-trust law suit from happening against M$ in the 90s.
Open Office on the cloud would allow you to run it on a device that supports web browsing, but does not have precompiled binaries. A good example would be a tablet, or smart phone.
Interestingly enough, the dark green states in that map seem to roughly correlate to how much nuclear power is produced in the state. Go figure.
Though I question the numbers.
In Maryland, I can buy all Wind Powered energy from Ohio (which is actually cheaper then the mostly coal mix that I get by default). I have to imagine that that would lessen the impact.
What I want is not a dock for my phone, but to have its screen be stretchable to adjust the resolution. Extend the canvas out for when you want that extra real estate, but collapse it back down when you want it to fit in your pocket.
I'm having trouble finding qualified people in general it seems like. People want oodles of money, but don't know anything about databases, and have never worked with an external API. Tons of PHP developers are script kiddies who want to pump out Drupal sites, but know little to nothing about real programming (What's Big O? I don't know). When you tell these people that we want real programming, and not some front end development, a lot of them seem to loose interest beyond being downright unqualified. Beyond that, I don't really understand how someone crapping out Drupal sites can expect to ask 80-100k.
The bigger problem seems to be a lack of CS students. I don't particularly think that DC is stealing our talent (We are not particularly looking to make anyone do that hour commute--it is pretty brutal). I have personally seen more (entry level) people decline because they talked with Google, who wanted them to move to NY/Cali to make 60-70k--and Google has that epic reputation like cocaine to rats.
More like good bye after market vendors.
What's wrong with being a drunk homosexual?
I know right? Unless he is making the comment that Larry Ellison is a drunk homosexual, which is probably more offensive to drunk homosexuals.
I kind of wish they went with Ask Jeeves instead.
When software stops being made for end users.
After you're done reading a book, you put it down, and maybe never even read it again. After you read 100 resumes, and pick a couple to talk to the people you have to hire someone. That someone will be in your life for the forseable future. It makes the consequence of picking a bad or--even worse--a mediocre candidate a serious decision. Its much worse to hire a mediocre employee because it will take you longer to figure out they are no good, and even longer to get rid of them.
Not true. If there are no buyers at your price point you will not be profitable.
Oh man, I think that is almost not work safe.
They already did this:
https://developer.blackberry.com/builtforblackberry/documentation/10kcommitment.html
They even sent me a free tablet on the hopes I'd build an app for them.
http://www.madewithmarmalade.com/press/rim-and-marmalade-offer-developers-free-sdk-licences-and-blackberry-playbook-tablet
It was a pretty sweet deal I have to admit.
My bad, PM's dont exist. You can use this form: http://perfectresolution.com/?page_id=565
I'll have to dig them out of the box in storage to figure out what I have. probably around 10-15 class and race books, and a binder of monsters.
My bad, PM's dont exist. You can use this form: http://perfectresolution.com/?page_id=565
I'll have to dig them out of the box in storage to figure out what I have. probably around 10-15 class and race books, and a binder of monsters.
My bad, PM's dont exist. You can use this form: http://perfectresolution.com/?page_id=565
I have many AD&D books I am looking to sell. Please PM me if you are interested.
Oh man you just made my day.
Yes, but side loading is installing another piece of software. My point was just because you can do something--such as install an app from a different repo, or install a different web browser on an OS--doesn't mean that you don't have a monopoly.
I agree. These people have also never tried to sell art through a gallery. 30% would be lauded as a tiny cut of the profit in that industry...
Please note, you could install a different browser then IE6 on windows 95/98, but that did not stop the anti-trust law suit from happening against M$ in the 90s.
Open Office on the cloud would allow you to run it on a device that supports web browsing, but does not have precompiled binaries. A good example would be a tablet, or smart phone.
Thought of Al here. Either scenario is funny--though ones a comedy and the others a tragedy.
Interestingly enough, the dark green states in that map seem to roughly correlate to how much nuclear power is produced in the state. Go figure.
Though I question the numbers.
In Maryland, I can buy all Wind Powered energy from Ohio (which is actually cheaper then the mostly coal mix that I get by default). I have to imagine that that would lessen the impact.
I recently learned that ORACLE is an Acryonym. It stands for One Rich Asshole Called Larry Ellison.
If it's at the bottom of the pack, who is at the top?
OpenStack is a cloud infrastructure built by rackspace to replace the VMWare option--cause they didn't want to pay the licensing fees any more.
What I want is not a dock for my phone, but to have its screen be stretchable to adjust the resolution. Extend the canvas out for when you want that extra real estate, but collapse it back down when you want it to fit in your pocket.
I had a friend who built an entire fake persona that she used to answer her security questions. Address, parents, pets, you name it.
In hind site she was probably a little schizophrenic.
I'm having trouble finding qualified people in general it seems like. People want oodles of money, but don't know anything about databases, and have never worked with an external API. Tons of PHP developers are script kiddies who want to pump out Drupal sites, but know little to nothing about real programming (What's Big O? I don't know). When you tell these people that we want real programming, and not some front end development, a lot of them seem to loose interest beyond being downright unqualified. Beyond that, I don't really understand how someone crapping out Drupal sites can expect to ask 80-100k.
The bigger problem seems to be a lack of CS students. I don't particularly think that DC is stealing our talent (We are not particularly looking to make anyone do that hour commute--it is pretty brutal). I have personally seen more (entry level) people decline because they talked with Google, who wanted them to move to NY/Cali to make 60-70k--and Google has that epic reputation like cocaine to rats.