But he will be competing with an entire second class of graduating engineers, every year the number of potential applicants grows and the number of jobs is not going up.
I don't think these teachers are upset that they aren't making "bank" but you realize that after paying for an undergrad degree teachers are required to peruse a masters as well. All at incredibly high costs, while making less than they would in another line of work so they spend their lives struggling to get by so they can do what they love.
You realize we want to encourage people to be teachers? We would ultimately like the best people available teaching our children. Does this sound like a good way to make that happen?
When? tuition prices have been skyrocketing year over year. Being able to do this 10 or 5 years ago, while still impressive, doesn't have as much bearing as you might think? How many years did it take? Perhaps your state happens to still have a low cost school but many do not.
That 35 hour week is just to pay tuition, never mind room and board. I guess if your lucky you can live at your parents house if it happens to be close enough to a state university but then there are transportation costs.
I think most peoples actual issue is that the tabs are in the title bar of the window. I am not sure that so many people actually care about which is on top as long as there is a title bar above them
if the tabs don't terminate at the top of the screen then they are no easier to hit with a mouse there then they are anywhere else. Putting tabs in the title bar greatly reduces the users ability to move the window.
If you use tabs a lot then chrome is even worse, it shrinks the size of the tabs until you can't see whats on them.
There are fairly simple ways to mitigate this problem you simply don't pull the tab off until the user has dragged it a suitable distance from the bar. I haven't done any experiments but I would bet 150 pixels off would be a good place to start. If the user drags less than that distance you simply do not tear off the tab. You only provide visual feedback of the tear once the user reaches that threshold.
People have been dealing with this kind of problem for years and its just not that hard to work out.
I wouldn't care so much about this except the tabs are up in the damn title bar on the mac. You end up with this tiny little slice of window you can click on to move it and most of the time you end up clicking on a tab instead. Its a terrible bit of interface and it assumes that all users are going to operate full screen all the time.
I have been pretty unimpressed by the UI designs I have seen coming out of Google and it does seem to come with a whole lot of the "We know whats best for you" mentality that only makes things worse.
If you want to get a PDF into the iPhone via iTunes you do have to go through 2 steps, I don't know why that is, but what you do is drag it into iTunes as a book and then sync it to your phone. You can't drag it directly onto the phone apparently. I'm not sure why this is, but I would say it is easier than emailing it to yourself.
Yea, or you get ignored and become quickly disillusioned, or worse yet, you step on the wrong persons foot. If you are going to go this route, you still need to be prepared to bail if things go wrong.
yea but you can't do that for balls/strikes and that is a huge part of the problem. Also, having automated fair/foul would be good because you wouldn't be stopping the play. If you replay and a foul call turns out to be fair, you end up with the problem of where to put the runner, would he have made it to second on that ball? If the fair/foul call is automated the play would proceed normally.
Its a lot easier when all your problems can be personified in one dictatorial leader. We here have a much more complicated time.
And I suspect the people of Egypt are now finding out that their problems were much bigger than just one dictator. Certainly he had to go to even start dealing with the problems, but now they find themselves facing down a host of smaller problems and disagreements about how to fix them.
Actually you can turn off location services entirely for an application and it cannot get your rough location from cell towers. I have done this with the google plus app and, since it isn't horribly written, it simply disables the features which are location based.
Yea, because New York police don't have a history of causing problems where none exist.
Perhaps the reason Tea party protests don't run into issues with the police is because they don't protest in areas where the police have such a significant history of brutality.
If there was something you could legitimately call the Tea party before fox got in on the game then frankly, it was way to small to make a damn bit of difference.
Am I the only one who remembers the way Fox news pretty much started the Tea party? Does nobody else remember their commentators actually organizing Tea parties and encouraging others to do so?
Thats not exactly what I mean when I say grass roots. It would be nice if the Occupy Wall Street movement had an entire 24/7 news organization doing that for them.
If you accept that corporations have an overwhelming voice in our governance that drowns out that of normal citizens then he really doesn't have much in the way of representation.
But he will be competing with an entire second class of graduating engineers, every year the number of potential applicants grows and the number of jobs is not going up.
I don't think these teachers are upset that they aren't making "bank" but you realize that after paying for an undergrad degree teachers are required to peruse a masters as well. All at incredibly high costs, while making less than they would in another line of work so they spend their lives struggling to get by so they can do what they love.
You realize we want to encourage people to be teachers? We would ultimately like the best people available teaching our children. Does this sound like a good way to make that happen?
Yea, better to ditch essential services than tax rich people.
That should solve our unemployment problem right there.
When? tuition prices have been skyrocketing year over year. Being able to do this 10 or 5 years ago, while still impressive, doesn't have as much bearing as you might think? How many years did it take? Perhaps your state happens to still have a low cost school but many do not.
That 35 hour week is just to pay tuition, never mind room and board. I guess if your lucky you can live at your parents house if it happens to be close enough to a state university but then there are transportation costs.
It's not as easy as you think to work you way through school these days. It is likely a lot harder than what you expect.
http://www.thesimpledollar.com/2011/10/13/a-dose-of-financial-reality/
Really? Because I have taken more than one written exam as part of a job application process. Its not incredibly common, but it certainly happens.
I think most peoples actual issue is that the tabs are in the title bar of the window. I am not sure that so many people actually care about which is on top as long as there is a title bar above them
if the tabs don't terminate at the top of the screen then they are no easier to hit with a mouse there then they are anywhere else. Putting tabs in the title bar greatly reduces the users ability to move the window.
If you use tabs a lot then chrome is even worse, it shrinks the size of the tabs until you can't see whats on them.
There are fairly simple ways to mitigate this problem you simply don't pull the tab off until the user has dragged it a suitable distance from the bar. I haven't done any experiments but I would bet 150 pixels off would be a good place to start. If the user drags less than that distance you simply do not tear off the tab. You only provide visual feedback of the tear once the user reaches that threshold.
People have been dealing with this kind of problem for years and its just not that hard to work out.
I wouldn't care so much about this except the tabs are up in the damn title bar on the mac. You end up with this tiny little slice of window you can click on to move it and most of the time you end up clicking on a tab instead. Its a terrible bit of interface and it assumes that all users are going to operate full screen all the time.
I have been pretty unimpressed by the UI designs I have seen coming out of Google and it does seem to come with a whole lot of the "We know whats best for you" mentality that only makes things worse.
I think you are confused about some of the things Siri can do. It's a lot more clever than just a tiny set of commands.
That 220 million is from before the iPhone 4s launch. They sold a million of those in the first 24 hours of pre-order.
If you want to get a PDF into the iPhone via iTunes you do have to go through 2 steps, I don't know why that is, but what you do is drag it into iTunes as a book and then sync it to your phone. You can't drag it directly onto the phone apparently. I'm not sure why this is, but I would say it is easier than emailing it to yourself.
The UI is pretty damn clear, but it won't stop users from making stupid mistakes.
shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.
Yea, or you get ignored and become quickly disillusioned, or worse yet, you step on the wrong persons foot. If you are going to go this route, you still need to be prepared to bail if things go wrong.
yea but you can't do that for balls/strikes and that is a huge part of the problem. Also, having automated fair/foul would be good because you wouldn't be stopping the play. If you replay and a foul call turns out to be fair, you end up with the problem of where to put the runner, would he have made it to second on that ball? If the fair/foul call is automated the play would proceed normally.
Its a lot easier when all your problems can be personified in one dictatorial leader. We here have a much more complicated time.
And I suspect the people of Egypt are now finding out that their problems were much bigger than just one dictator. Certainly he had to go to even start dealing with the problems, but now they find themselves facing down a host of smaller problems and disagreements about how to fix them.
Turns out this shit ain't easy.
Actually you can turn off location services entirely for an application and it cannot get your rough location from cell towers. I have done this with the google plus app and, since it isn't horribly written, it simply disables the features which are location based.
yea, the Affordable housing act totally required banks to use robo-signers.
Yea, because New York police don't have a history of causing problems where none exist.
Perhaps the reason Tea party protests don't run into issues with the police is because they don't protest in areas where the police have such a significant history of brutality.
If there was something you could legitimately call the Tea party before fox got in on the game then frankly, it was way to small to make a damn bit of difference.
Am I the only one who remembers the way Fox news pretty much started the Tea party? Does nobody else remember their commentators actually organizing Tea parties and encouraging others to do so?
Thats not exactly what I mean when I say grass roots. It would be nice if the Occupy Wall Street movement had an entire 24/7 news organization doing that for them.
If you accept that corporations have an overwhelming voice in our governance that drowns out that of normal citizens then he really doesn't have much in the way of representation.