DuckDodgers didn't know this and that's who I was responding to.
From a quick web search I found patents from HP covering IL optimizations so I'm not convinced that the giant patent infringement settlement between MS and Sun specifically covered the IL optimizations we're talking about.
.Net also does dynamic and re-usable runtime optimizations. You can also instruct it to inline certain methods, load certain resources in the background that you expect to use but the runtime will do the same thing, just maybe not as intelligently. "Code Complete 2" has some code execution speed examples in it and most of them show C# running faster than Java; The author was comparing simple ops like method calls, conditionals, dictionaries, arrays, etc.
I considered posting a link to the wikileaks article specifically about the CIA plan to discredit wikileaks through ad-hominen attacks against the organization and the individuals running it but then I would have been labeled a conspiracy theorist.
How does one vote the OP as flame-bate? Julian isn't raising the money, he isn't even promoting it. He just re-tweeted about it. This has to be the most purposefully misleading post I've ever seen on slash dot.
Says who? A lot of gun owners have t-shirts and stickers which say things like "what part of 'shall not be infringed' do you not understand?"
They only read half of the sentence and assumed that was the complete second amendment. The full amendment reads "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." It implies that they need to be a well regulated militia to have this right and in fact both the background for the amendment as well as early supreme court decisions show this to be the case. It's also clearly not saying unfettered access to arms, only that they can keep and bear arms; would anyone want a sociopath to have a nuclear bomb or automatic weapon anyways?
Only antisocial people are afraid of eye contact. It's normal for non-nerds to look eachother in the eyes, especially if they're friends. If they're enemies then yeah, eye contact is intimidating but not as intimidating as looking at the club you're going to beat them with. See wikipedia for more information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_contact
You seem to be arguing against basic competitive economic theory. While your point seems logical the more likely case is that the low ROI colleges will starve until they lower their prices or increase graduation and post-education employment rates. I won't argue that the high ROI schools won't go down a bit once people start flocking to them for the best deal but to think the prices would only go up when people are given tools for finding the best schools doesn't make much sense.
I think everything else you wrote was good but in the case of disclosing security attack vectors, letting everyone know or only letting hackers know, before giving the company a chance to fix the security hole results in a great many more hackers using the attack vector than if it had been reported without public disclosure. We have no idea who figured out the attack vector first, the researcher could very possibly be first, or be one of the first, to discover it. Do hackers always share attack vectors with other hackers immediately after finding them?
Security bugs are very different from functionality bugs and should not be compared. Similarly the disclosure of these bugs should follow different paths.
That article is mostly about the NSA's responsibility to collect intelligence on foreign communications. They didn't going into comsec as much as comsint. The CIA collects intelligence through non communication interception methods such as infiltration, espionage, etc. All of our intelligence agencies have some degree of overlap but intercepting and decrypting communications is a primary responsibility of the NSA, not the CIA, as confirmed by your own source.
Really? The NSA has always been a spy agency. Even in the 60's they were decrypting communications of foreign governments. Wikipedia's opening paragraph on the NSA mentions spying before security as well. Where did you get the idea that they aren't a spy agency?
The lollacup episode on Shark Tank had some interesting tidbits about contracts with marketing firms. To summarize, do not give your marketers exclusivity to profits for a market (asia for instance) and make sure they profit from their contributions to the market success of your product. The Lollacup creators had good business sense but still managed to make a contract with a marketing firm which took advantage of them.
I can't figure out the specific company that made a presentation video about this exact situation but it was posted here on slashdot about a year ago if anyone remembers it. I thought it was Pixar but searching the web for the video didn't turn up much. The gist of the process was that 10 CS Doctors worked on an algorithm for 3 years to greatly improve speed and believability of rendering light interactions with objects. They patented each promising attempt but it still took 3 years to perfect the algorithm and apply for their final patent.
If the evolution of the algorithm had no missteps then requiring code at each stage would have been fine for them but they had many missteps and not all of their patents are useful compared to the last one they published. Imagine someone got wind of what their abstract, non-coded idea was and hired a bunch of programmers to make a very poor version of it and then patented it. They would lose their economic incentive to finish the project and we'd all be stuck with a really bad implementation of their good idea. I guess alternatively they could just go ahead and waste time coding up a very bad version of their idea and then rewrite all the code correctly later.
The project I'm working on right now for a well known company has about 50 engineers working on it and has been going almost a year now. We had working code after 3 months for the basic idea but we still don't have code demonstrating the ultimate vision of our product. So that works out to roughly 5 man-decades before we'll have a fully coded implementation of the patent filed several years ago. The last company I worked for had a much larger software team working on an even more complex project but the basic idea had been patented long ago and we were just making small incremental improvements on it, some of which we patented.
Do you have some proof that people were thinking about creating a one-click checkout before amazon patented or implemented it on their website? A forum post or user group discussion would be sufficient. Many innovations appear obvious after they are invented, not before.
That's quite true that they're limited by their fingers but the difference of a few rounds a second is considerable if the spree goes on for a few minutes which most do; 2 extra shots per second x 60 seconds/minute x 2 minutes = 240 extra bullets. I don't think we should be comparing your fire rate to a pro like the guy in the youtube video but there has to be someone with equal pistol/file skill that has compared fire rates including reloads. It's such a simple thing to test and would put this whole argument about clip capacity limits to rest.
The guy in the video managed to average 3 rounds per second using his 6 round clip. This is much slower than what can be done by a carbine and that's not taking into account the fact that he can only store so many clips in a position on his body which can be quickly taken from without looking at it. You're argument also assumes that Torres was trying to shoot as many bullets as fast as possible which is dubious considering his firing speed. Finally, even marines and people who frequent firing ranges can't speed reload like that. It takes a lot of practice and most people will fail miserably at it when the adrenaline kicks in.
I'll admit that I was only thinking of the last couple shootings which were committed using carbines but overall pistols do come out ahead by a small margin compared to assault rifles/carbines. I say small margin because even though in many cases the suspects were also armed with pistols, their primary weapon was a rifle. http://www.nycrimecommission.org/initiative1-shootings.php
They're using mortars and AK's, neither of which are legal in the USA. The gun-rights advocates are defending possession of firearms which are decidedly not capable of equaling military firepower. I most definitely want us to keep high caliber small arms and sniper rifles as a deterrent against tyranny but carbines really aren't needed and are the weapon of choice in mass shootings.
Afghanistan was costly for the USSR because they were fighting rebels armed with the latest US military hardware and training. Check out "Charlie Wilson's War" for the docudrama about the conflict.
Right, but it may have in fact meant something outside of College so I was covering both bases with my comment. I'm sorry if that wasn't clear from what I wrote. I also assumed you fit into the category of people for which you were referring because you made such a negative comment in response to what I wrote. It was a calculated guess but you really didn't give me much information to figure out why you were calling me a stoned pinhead. I should have just ignored your negativity and tried to address the confusion but that's hard to do when someone pisses you off.
The personal attack response isn't a US thing as far as I know. The research I've read so far on the subject indicated that It's caused by disassociation from community. In essence people don't realize that there really is another person on the other side of a text based conversation.
If your point was simply that some people want to go through life in a different order then I totally agree with you. On the other hand, if your point was that they are enjoying themselves more by choosing a path that either doesn't involve college or involves a education track which doesn't develop a marketable skill-set, then I'd say they're being shortsighted and should re-evaluate both their goals and plan to accomplish those goals.
I have no idea how you you would think I was baked based on what I wrote.Are you trying to protect your lack of accomplishments through the use of humor?
Cut the sarcasm man. It doesn't suit your extremely weak argument.
Someone who worked at MS over ten years ago is not "a Microsoft employee". Troll someone else.
DuckDodgers didn't know this and that's who I was responding to.
From a quick web search I found patents from HP covering IL optimizations so I'm not convinced that the giant patent infringement settlement between MS and Sun specifically covered the IL optimizations we're talking about.
.Net also does dynamic and re-usable runtime optimizations. You can also instruct it to inline certain methods, load certain resources in the background that you expect to use but the runtime will do the same thing, just maybe not as intelligently. "Code Complete 2" has some code execution speed examples in it and most of them show C# running faster than Java; The author was comparing simple ops like method calls, conditionals, dictionaries, arrays, etc.
I considered posting a link to the wikileaks article specifically about the CIA plan to discredit wikileaks through ad-hominen attacks against the organization and the individuals running it but then I would have been labeled a conspiracy theorist.
How does one vote the OP as flame-bate? Julian isn't raising the money, he isn't even promoting it. He just re-tweeted about it. This has to be the most purposefully misleading post I've ever seen on slash dot.
Hey, the US could use some of those things too! http://www.infrastructurerepor...
Says who? A lot of gun owners have t-shirts and stickers which say things like "what part of 'shall not be infringed' do you not understand?"
They only read half of the sentence and assumed that was the complete second amendment. The full amendment reads "A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." It implies that they need to be a well regulated militia to have this right and in fact both the background for the amendment as well as early supreme court decisions show this to be the case. It's also clearly not saying unfettered access to arms, only that they can keep and bear arms; would anyone want a sociopath to have a nuclear bomb or automatic weapon anyways?
There's quite a bit of info on wikipedia about the amendment which is worth reading if you find this topic interesting: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution.
Only antisocial people are afraid of eye contact. It's normal for non-nerds to look eachother in the eyes, especially if they're friends. If they're enemies then yeah, eye contact is intimidating but not as intimidating as looking at the club you're going to beat them with. See wikipedia for more information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_contact
You seem to be arguing against basic competitive economic theory. While your point seems logical the more likely case is that the low ROI colleges will starve until they lower their prices or increase graduation and post-education employment rates. I won't argue that the high ROI schools won't go down a bit once people start flocking to them for the best deal but to think the prices would only go up when people are given tools for finding the best schools doesn't make much sense.
I think everything else you wrote was good but in the case of disclosing security attack vectors, letting everyone know or only letting hackers know, before giving the company a chance to fix the security hole results in a great many more hackers using the attack vector than if it had been reported without public disclosure. We have no idea who figured out the attack vector first, the researcher could very possibly be first, or be one of the first, to discover it. Do hackers always share attack vectors with other hackers immediately after finding them?
Security bugs are very different from functionality bugs and should not be compared. Similarly the disclosure of these bugs should follow different paths.
" The NSA's job is securing our nation's communications, not unsecuring those of other nations." - you
That article is mostly about the NSA's responsibility to collect intelligence on foreign communications. They didn't going into comsec as much as comsint. The CIA collects intelligence through non communication interception methods such as infiltration, espionage, etc. All of our intelligence agencies have some degree of overlap but intercepting and decrypting communications is a primary responsibility of the NSA, not the CIA, as confirmed by your own source.
Really? The NSA has always been a spy agency. Even in the 60's they were decrypting communications of foreign governments. Wikipedia's opening paragraph on the NSA mentions spying before security as well. Where did you get the idea that they aren't a spy agency?
Have you heard of SLAPP suits. They are very much alive in the US but some states have taken measures against them at least.
The lollacup episode on Shark Tank had some interesting tidbits about contracts with marketing firms. To summarize, do not give your marketers exclusivity to profits for a market (asia for instance) and make sure they profit from their contributions to the market success of your product. The Lollacup creators had good business sense but still managed to make a contract with a marketing firm which took advantage of them.
I can't figure out the specific company that made a presentation video about this exact situation but it was posted here on slashdot about a year ago if anyone remembers it. I thought it was Pixar but searching the web for the video didn't turn up much. The gist of the process was that 10 CS Doctors worked on an algorithm for 3 years to greatly improve speed and believability of rendering light interactions with objects. They patented each promising attempt but it still took 3 years to perfect the algorithm and apply for their final patent.
If the evolution of the algorithm had no missteps then requiring code at each stage would have been fine for them but they had many missteps and not all of their patents are useful compared to the last one they published. Imagine someone got wind of what their abstract, non-coded idea was and hired a bunch of programmers to make a very poor version of it and then patented it. They would lose their economic incentive to finish the project and we'd all be stuck with a really bad implementation of their good idea. I guess alternatively they could just go ahead and waste time coding up a very bad version of their idea and then rewrite all the code correctly later.
The project I'm working on right now for a well known company has about 50 engineers working on it and has been going almost a year now. We had working code after 3 months for the basic idea but we still don't have code demonstrating the ultimate vision of our product. So that works out to roughly 5 man-decades before we'll have a fully coded implementation of the patent filed several years ago. The last company I worked for had a much larger software team working on an even more complex project but the basic idea had been patented long ago and we were just making small incremental improvements on it, some of which we patented.
Do you have some proof that people were thinking about creating a one-click checkout before amazon patented or implemented it on their website? A forum post or user group discussion would be sufficient. Many innovations appear obvious after they are invented, not before.
That's quite true that they're limited by their fingers but the difference of a few rounds a second is considerable if the spree goes on for a few minutes which most do; 2 extra shots per second x 60 seconds/minute x 2 minutes = 240 extra bullets. I don't think we should be comparing your fire rate to a pro like the guy in the youtube video but there has to be someone with equal pistol/file skill that has compared fire rates including reloads. It's such a simple thing to test and would put this whole argument about clip capacity limits to rest.
The guy in the video managed to average 3 rounds per second using his 6 round clip. This is much slower than what can be done by a carbine and that's not taking into account the fact that he can only store so many clips in a position on his body which can be quickly taken from without looking at it. You're argument also assumes that Torres was trying to shoot as many bullets as fast as possible which is dubious considering his firing speed. Finally, even marines and people who frequent firing ranges can't speed reload like that. It takes a lot of practice and most people will fail miserably at it when the adrenaline kicks in.
I'll admit that I was only thinking of the last couple shootings which were committed using carbines but overall pistols do come out ahead by a small margin compared to assault rifles/carbines. I say small margin because even though in many cases the suspects were also armed with pistols, their primary weapon was a rifle.
http://www.nycrimecommission.org/initiative1-shootings.php
They're using mortars and AK's, neither of which are legal in the USA. The gun-rights advocates are defending possession of firearms which are decidedly not capable of equaling military firepower. I most definitely want us to keep high caliber small arms and sniper rifles as a deterrent against tyranny but carbines really aren't needed and are the weapon of choice in mass shootings.
Afghanistan was costly for the USSR because they were fighting rebels armed with the latest US military hardware and training. Check out "Charlie Wilson's War" for the docudrama about the conflict.
Right, but it may have in fact meant something outside of College so I was covering both bases with my comment. I'm sorry if that wasn't clear from what I wrote. I also assumed you fit into the category of people for which you were referring because you made such a negative comment in response to what I wrote. It was a calculated guess but you really didn't give me much information to figure out why you were calling me a stoned pinhead. I should have just ignored your negativity and tried to address the confusion but that's hard to do when someone pisses you off.
The personal attack response isn't a US thing as far as I know. The research I've read so far on the subject indicated that It's caused by disassociation from community. In essence people don't realize that there really is another person on the other side of a text based conversation.
If your point was simply that some people want to go through life in a different order then I totally agree with you. On the other hand, if your point was that they are enjoying themselves more by choosing a path that either doesn't involve college or involves a education track which doesn't develop a marketable skill-set, then I'd say they're being shortsighted and should re-evaluate both their goals and plan to accomplish those goals.
I have no idea how you you would think I was baked based on what I wrote.Are you trying to protect your lack of accomplishments through the use of humor?