I found TSP the other month when cleaning up after stubbornly glued wall paper. I went with the TSP alternative due to no-rinse factor and, as another comment said, the environmental factor. Most of the stuff you might need is also in the building material area, not the cleaning aisle oddly.
6) Company B, having successfully fleeced the public initially, now set out a way to fleece the public....again/ 7) Company B, reusing same political connections under Company A, convince gov't to buy Company B's wares. 8) Profit! 9) Use new monies to get policy makers to write restrictions that put your product/industry in a legalized monopoly. 10) Profit! 11) Become overleveraged and essential that you can then afford to make bad decisions without fear of recourse. 12) Hold industry/public hostage using "If we aren't saved, the public suffers greatly". 13) Get public monies again b/c you are too big to fail. 14) Profit!
With the Arduino, I can get a LCD + DS18S20 up and running in 20 minutes from unwrapping to code compiled and measuring temps. Part of it may just be where I'm at on the learning curve or maybe it is that easy.
Can you do this on the ARM platform? Not intending to troll, I'm flat out curious about the libraries and ease of use.
When you have monthly deliverables, you get a pretty fast feedback loop. The code I write gets put in use pretty darn quick.
I'm not saying a manager keeping updated is a bad thing. I'm just saying that the frequent pings and requests for information can cause more harm than good, especially if a manager thinks they can get highly accurate and highly precise data every time.
Ensure Felony Penalties for Infringement By Streaming and by Means of Other New Technology: It is imperative that our laws account for changes in technology used by infringers. One recent technological change is the illegal streaming of content. Existing law provides felony penalties for willful copyright infringement, but felony penalties are predicated on the defendant either illegally reproducing or distributing the copyrighted work.2 Questions have arisen about whether streaming constitutes the distribution of copyrighted works (and thereby is a felony) and/or performance of those works (and thereby is a not a felony). These questions have impaired the criminal enforcement of copyright laws. To ensure that Federal copyright law keeps pace with infringers, and to ensure that DOJ and U.S. law enforcement agencies are able to effectively combat infringement involving new technology, the Administration recommends that Congress clarify that infringement by streaming, or by means of other similar new technology, is a felony in appropriate circumstances. Recommendation: The Administration recommends that Congress clarify that infringement by streaming, or by means of other similar new technology, is a felony in appropriate circumstances.
To me, this sounds like MS has no f'ing clue what they are doing as a whole. They're pushing open source via MPL in other areas with codeplex such as MVC.
Then crap like this happens. I gotta imagine that there are software folks at MS wondering why they still work there.
Gawker actually encrypted,from what I've read, their passwords, rather than store a hash of them. This is what allowed even folks with good passwords to become vulnerable to Gawker's idiocy. The encryption can eventually be broken, exposing everyone's passwords.
But yeah, assuming a global salt or non-salted usage, once you figure out the hash for user A, you can easily tell if any other users have that password. The salt isn't really a secret. It just tells the person with your password list "Good luck compromising a user anytime soon with your precomputed hash tables."
I browsed through the interview and hope I can listen to the podcast soon.
He says some neat things:
James Gosling: Various Oracle employees have been instructed not to wear them. I've noticed this is a great tshirt(the "Free Duke" shirt) to wear in big crowds around here because the seas just parts, 'cuz people are like, 'I don't want to be near that.' Which I find really funny. And the whole free java thing is kind of a weird history with me because Sun from day zero is an open source company and this whole weirdness that we have about open source was not a weirdness open source but a weirdness about the actors and the games in the drama.
James Gosling: Absolutely. I have this love hate thing with Google these days. They can get kind of creepy.
Moderator: Do you use the browser plug ins that prevent the ads and block and analytic stuff?
James Gosling: No. I mean, I sometimes do.
Some...well...things that I don't think I can get behind:
In the enterprise space, things like Cassandra and Voldemort and some of the NoSQL database. I've never got it when it comes to SQL databases. It's like, why? Just give me a hash table and a shitload of RAM and I'm happy. And then you do something to deal with failures. And you look at the way things like the NoSQL movement is. It's various flavors of large scale distributed hash tables and trying to deal with massive scale and massive replication, and you can't back up the database because no tape farm is big enough. And you find scale and reliability can fit together at the same time
and some interesting:
James Gosling: Well that's right, [they](Oracle) didn't own Java, but it just points out, and I don't know how to say it other than to say they were lying, duplicitous shits three years ago and by their turnaround, they're basically admitting that. Oracle is kind of a funny company because they take glory in that. They have no issues with being categorized that way. Some of their PR people might get a little uncomfortable with it, but up at the top, they deeply, deeply don't give a shit.
I'm still not sure how to regard Oracle right now, but I'm comfortable with the idea that Java needs a permanent and legal separate existence from Oracle.
Re:Too bad they can't put some effort towards test
on
Review: Halo: Reach
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· Score: 1
Whoops. That should have been "co-op and firefight". Multiplayer works fine with/without a hard drive.
Too bad they can't put some effort towards testing
on
Review: Halo: Reach
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· Score: 2, Informative
Think of it like a highway. If certain people pay to get to their exit first, you have to slow down to let them in and through.
Unless they specifically BUILD an exit for those higher paying folks. A Transit Authority never takes an existing road and turns it into a toll road. They build an entirely new infrastructure for that revenue.(Not sure if this is true...just makes sense).
We should see service improvement for extra pay, not maintaining the status quo and degradation.
Whenever we had an issue with these damn 270's, first thing we did was check the mobo.
It was incredibly easy to identify. The capacitors almost always had a domed top or actually leaked some dielectric fluid onto the mobo.
Dell was good in that the overnighted the mobo with a guy to install it the next day. It's not an excuse for Dell, but they did what they were supposed to.
It was actually a great learning experience for college-age me. I learned alot about software deployment scripts and all that fun stuff to build a stock of machines so that I could easily swap out a machine when the mobos inevitably failed.
Does it really make sense to try and hire US software folks? Is local talent that bad that Baidu looks for US folks or folks outside the US?
The US has good software folks, but is it really that much better than places like Brazil, etc., where Baidu could probably get a bigger bang for their buck if global growth is a priority?
I'll wait a few weeks for the package managers to get any fixes in them, but I fully intend on upgrading soon. It'll probably break my video card setup again, which'll require
I guess I'm just one of the few folks who are happy with MythTV on/.
It took a while to get it running smoothly. Plus, I can't think of any other projects that can manage schedules and records HDTV over clearQAM with the flexibility that a MythTV box does.
It's a pain, but, combined with the helpful folks at KernelLabs.com, it's getting better and better.
I found TSP the other month when cleaning up after stubbornly glued wall paper. I went with the TSP alternative due to no-rinse factor and, as another comment said, the environmental factor. Most of the stuff you might need is also in the building material area, not the cleaning aisle oddly.
6) Company B, having successfully fleeced the public initially, now set out a way to fleece the public....again/
7) Company B, reusing same political connections under Company A, convince gov't to buy Company B's wares.
8) Profit!
9) Use new monies to get policy makers to write restrictions that put your product/industry in a legalized monopoly.
10) Profit!
11) Become overleveraged and essential that you can then afford to make bad decisions without fear of recourse.
12) Hold industry/public hostage using "If we aren't saved, the public suffers greatly".
13) Get public monies again b/c you are too big to fail.
14) Profit!
Ok, that example is mostly a joke....mostly.
B/c if a professor doesn't publish, they're a bum?
With the Arduino, I can get a LCD + DS18S20 up and running in 20 minutes from unwrapping to code compiled and measuring temps. Part of it may just be where I'm at on the learning curve or maybe it is that easy.
Can you do this on the ARM platform? Not intending to troll, I'm flat out curious about the libraries and ease of use.
When you have monthly deliverables, you get a pretty fast feedback loop. The code I write gets put in use pretty darn quick.
I'm not saying a manager keeping updated is a bad thing. I'm just saying that the frequent pings and requests for information can cause more harm than good, especially if a manager thinks they can get highly accurate and highly precise data every time.
I'm going to etch your comment onto something at my desk so that I will always remember it.
We were at the end a release and the two dev directors start hounding you "When will it be done? How much longer?", etc.
It gets to a point when you just want to say "It'll be done when it's checked in and code reviewed."
Page 10 of the actual whitepaper.
I like how "appropriate" is not spelled out.
To me, this sounds like MS has no f'ing clue what they are doing as a whole. They're pushing open source via MPL in other areas with codeplex such as MVC.
Then crap like this happens. I gotta imagine that there are software folks at MS wondering why they still work there.
Gawker actually encrypted,from what I've read, their passwords, rather than store a hash of them. This is what allowed even folks with good passwords to become vulnerable to Gawker's idiocy. The encryption can eventually be broken, exposing everyone's passwords.
But yeah, assuming a global salt or non-salted usage, once you figure out the hash for user A, you can easily tell if any other users have that password. The salt isn't really a secret. It just tells the person with your password list "Good luck compromising a user anytime soon with your precomputed hash tables."
Sometime in February 2012 after fans and Bethesda patch and finish the content!
I am actually pretty happy about this. I enjoyed morrowind and oblivion a lot and hope they can expand on the great stories just waiting to be told.
I think the issue with that is that it's not really making it any more difficult...just making it longer.
I agree with PA on this-Halo on Legendary is a chore.
There was one exception in Halo 3 where this wasn't true, during the New Mombasa highway.
you don't have to buy a "coding" license to write hello world on a Mac box
...Unless it was for iPhone development.
That's it. I'm doing what others have done and blocking kdawson. This summary is crap and should never have been posted.
I browsed through the interview and hope I can listen to the podcast soon.
He says some neat things:
Some...well...things that I don't think I can get behind:
and some interesting:
I'm still not sure how to regard Oracle right now, but I'm comfortable with the idea that Java needs a permanent and legal separate existence from Oracle.
Whoops. That should have been "co-op and firefight". Multiplayer works fine with/without a hard drive.
Anyone who bought a new 4GB slim version is screwed when it comes to co-op and multiplayer.
Having the flash drive does nothing.
How the hell do they release a title like this without some sort of testing, even when it was known way back in expansion pack Halo:ODST?
Agreed. Even on mobile, it's much easier to go through comment threads than rely on javascript to handle it properly.
Where is the "+1 Delicious" mod option?
Think of it like a highway. If certain people pay to get to their exit first, you have to slow down to let them in and through.
Unless they specifically BUILD an exit for those higher paying folks. A Transit Authority never takes an existing road and turns it into a toll road. They build an entirely new infrastructure for that revenue.(Not sure if this is true...just makes sense).
We should see service improvement for extra pay, not maintaining the status quo and degradation.
I remember this exact issue!
Whenever we had an issue with these damn 270's, first thing we did was check the mobo.
It was incredibly easy to identify. The capacitors almost always had a domed top or actually leaked some dielectric fluid onto the mobo.
Dell was good in that the overnighted the mobo with a guy to install it the next day. It's not an excuse for Dell, but they did what they were supposed to.
It was actually a great learning experience for college-age me. I learned alot about software deployment scripts and all that fun stuff to build a stock of machines so that I could easily swap out a machine when the mobos inevitably failed.
Honest question:
Does it really make sense to try and hire US software folks? Is local talent that bad that Baidu looks for US folks or folks outside the US?
The US has good software folks, but is it really that much better than places like Brazil, etc., where Baidu could probably get a bigger bang for their buck if global growth is a priority?
I'll wait a few weeks for the package managers to get any fixes in them, but I fully intend on upgrading soon. It'll probably break my video card setup again, which'll require
I guess I'm just one of the few folks who are happy with MythTV on /.
It took a while to get it running smoothly. Plus, I can't think of any other projects that can manage schedules and records HDTV over clearQAM with the flexibility that a MythTV box does.
It's a pain, but, combined with the helpful folks at KernelLabs.com, it's getting better and better.
True, as I was looking at S/MIME with openSSL. That implementation would be quite clean, with the right certificates.
Turns out they wanted more than S/MIME and GPG/PGP was the next tool on the list to look at.
Also true about the webmail client. I have a firefox addon that'll do both sign and encryption for gmail, but never really have a use for it.
I was specifically talking about PGP vs. GPG.
But, according to my bosses, that proprietary stuff is better! It has support contracts and since we buy the license, that must mean it's good.
It's not like Opensource stuff comes close, right?
Well, that is true for Outlook email client interfacing, which is a crapshoot anyways. The rest OpenSource handles quite well.