The Red Team is not building a machine from ground up. Navlab 11 was used as a proof of concept platform for the Red Team. In so far as I can tell, we were way ahead of the Stanford team during this summer - having accomplished a successful 8.6 miles autonomous traversal at our test site.
You are welcomed to take not take us seriously, but know this: we're entering to win.
Yes we know that the external Red Team website is hosted on IIS and powered by ASP. We're working on fixing these two bugs. =) Also to our defense, our internal technical web is powered by TWiki on Linux with Apache.
Which one? There are several stairways in Wean. I don't remember seeing any that had a big enough gap in the center to let you throw a monitor down though..
Membership into the U.N. is completely arbitrary. Explain to me why a democratic nation of 21 million people is consistently being denied entrance into the U.N.
Re:U.N. has no right .. a hypocritical organizatio
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UN Proposes Email Tax
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· Score: 1
Regarding the ROC claiming to have jurisdiction over all of China (and Mongolia), this is no longer true, as I have said in another message in this thread. The real reason the United Nations is not granting the ROC membership is because of communist China. communist China claims to represent all of China, which is clearly not the case.
It may be a surprise to you but right now, the ROC has a much larger economic presence in the U.S. (and perhaps the world) then communist China. True mainland's market has a much larger potential then the ROC, but as it is, were the ROC to be wiped off the face of the Earth, the economic effect would be much greater then say, if communist China's economy collapses. The ROC is among the world's top 15 trading nation and has one of the world's largest foreign exchange reserve. The ROC was United States seventh largest trading partner in 1998, etc. etc. I think you get the point.
Oh, ROC was also one of the few nation in Asia that had a mature enough banking / stock system to not be devastated by the economic troubles there.
Re:U.N. has no right .. a hypocritical organizatio
on
UN Proposes Email Tax
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· Score: 1
Yes, it is true that once upon a time the ROC government claimed jurisdiction over what is now communist China, and Mongolia. But that is simply not the way things are anymore. Prior to a few days ago, the government on ROC insisted that there is one China, which is being governed by two independent soverign governments. Then a few days ago the President of ROC announced that he would like to view the cross strait relationship as one of "state to state" or "special state to state". You must also remember that the government on ROC has already renounced the use of force to take over communist China, communist China still threatens to use its outdated arsenal on ROC.
Re:U.N. has no right .. a hypocritical organizatio
on
UN Proposes Email Tax
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· Score: 1
The "dictator" that now runs the Republic of China was chosen by the first ever democratic presidential election in Chinese history.
U.N. has no right .. a hypocritical organization
on
UN Proposes Email Tax
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· Score: 1
As I've said before, the United Nations has absolutely no right to the Internet. When the United Nations is able to break its own charter...
(Chapter II, Article 4, Section 1) Membership in the United Nations is open to all other peace-loving states which accept the obligations contained in the present Charter and, in the judgment of the Organization, are able and willing to carry out these obligations.
... and refuse membership to the Republic of China (Taiwan) (one of the UN's founding members!), it should not be trusted to guide the Internet. And remember, chances are your motherboard was manufactured in the Republic of China.
If nothing else taking CS courses in High School will allow you to test out the water before applying to colleges like CMU CS. Just look at the AP AB curriculum. My High School in addition to that has a second year course (the first year course being the AP CS AB) which teaches system level programming for UNIX in the first semester; motion description, ray tracing, lighting/shading, and animation (i.e. 3D graphics in general) in the second semester.
I don't see how the U.N. has any rights to regulate the Internet, especially when one of the world's largest producers of computer components (namely the Republic of China [Taiwan]) is barred from membership.
You're mistakening North Korea for China.
The Red Team is not building a machine from ground up. Navlab 11 was used as a proof of concept platform for the Red Team. In so far as I can tell, we were way ahead of the Stanford team during this summer - having accomplished a successful 8.6 miles autonomous traversal at our test site.
You are welcomed to take not take us seriously, but know this: we're entering to win.
Oops, I stand corrected. =)
Mirror hosted by CMU's Field Robotics Center: here.
Mirror hosted by Rutgers: here
Mirror hosted by CMU Computing Services: here
Yes we know that the external Red Team website is hosted on IIS and powered by ASP. We're working on fixing these two bugs. =) Also to our defense, our internal technical web is powered by TWiki on Linux with Apache.
Which one? There are several stairways in Wean. I don't remember seeing any that had a big enough gap in the center to let you throw a monitor down though..
The issue has been resolved by RedHat. You can read the bugzilla link here.
Basically, RedHat has agreed to remove all flags in the next update of kdebase.
It's Pittsburgh, not Pittsburg.
Membership into the U.N. is completely arbitrary. Explain to me why a democratic nation of 21 million people is consistently being denied entrance into the U.N.
Regarding the ROC claiming to have jurisdiction over all of China (and Mongolia), this is no longer true, as I have said in another message in this thread. The real reason the United Nations is not granting the ROC membership is because of communist China. communist China claims to represent all of China, which is clearly not the case.
It may be a surprise to you but right now, the ROC has a much larger economic presence in the U.S. (and perhaps the world) then communist China. True mainland's market has a much larger potential then the ROC, but as it is, were the ROC to be wiped off the face of the Earth, the economic effect would be much greater then say, if communist China's economy collapses. The ROC is among the world's top 15 trading nation and has one of the world's largest foreign exchange reserve. The ROC was United States seventh largest trading partner in 1998, etc. etc. I think you get the point.
Oh, ROC was also one of the few nation in Asia that had a mature enough banking / stock system to not be devastated by the economic troubles there.
Yes, it is true that once upon a time the ROC government claimed jurisdiction over what is now communist China, and Mongolia. But that is simply not the way things are anymore. Prior to a few days ago, the government on ROC insisted that there is one China, which is being governed by two independent soverign governments. Then a few days ago the President of ROC announced that he would like to view the cross strait relationship as one of "state to state" or "special state to state". You must also remember that the government on ROC has already renounced the use of force to take over communist China, communist China still threatens to use its outdated arsenal on ROC.
The "dictator" that now runs the Republic of China was chosen by the first ever democratic presidential election in Chinese history.
As I've said before, the United Nations has absolutely no right to the Internet. When the United Nations is able to break its own charter ...
(Chapter II, Article 4, Section 1)
Membership in the United Nations is open to all other peace-loving states which accept the obligations contained in the present Charter and, in the judgment of the Organization, are able and willing to carry out these obligations.
... and refuse membership to the Republic of China (Taiwan) (one of the UN's founding members!), it should not be trusted to guide the Internet. And remember, chances are your motherboard was manufactured in the Republic of China.
If nothing else taking CS courses in High School will allow you to test out the water before applying to colleges like CMU CS. Just look at the AP AB curriculum. My High School in addition to that has a second year course (the first year course being the AP CS AB) which teaches system level programming for UNIX in the first semester; motion description, ray tracing, lighting/shading, and animation (i.e. 3D graphics in general) in the second semester.
I don't see how the U.N. has any rights to regulate the Internet, especially when one of the world's largest producers of computer components (namely the Republic of China [Taiwan]) is barred from membership.