>>This should work exactly as well as physically abusing your child when he or she does something wrong. That way when they are faced with conflict later in life, they follow in your steps and resort to violence.
If the kid is type A and pushing boundaries, sometimes all they understand is face down on the floor with a foot to the back of their neck.
Kids, boys especially, have a natural tendency to assert dominance or attempt to usurp the balance. It's biological. Everyone wants to be the chief. If stern words, and nothing else works, sometimes there's only one solution;)
My son whacked me with a stick, I told him never to do it again, and he hit me harder. One sleeper hold later and he's never done it again and looks at me in a whole different light.
I did the same thing to my father and he had to put me in my place, once. That's all it took.
Every now and again they need to be put in their place. Of course you need to do it so you don't leave a mark or do any damage.
There are a lot of kids out there that could use a good asskicking. The ones that don't get it end up in prison, or continually get fired because they don't know when to shut up. Usually they are from a single parent household and being raised by a parent who doesn't have the stomach to instill proper discipline.
If you do it right you only need to do it once. Tough love is sometimes necessary. Anyone that says it isn't, and doesn't do what they need to, will pay.
Some people just have submissive kids and are lucky.
That being said, I solve most of my difficult challenges while taking a dump. I can hammer on a difficult problem for several hours, then solve it in 2 minutes on the porcelain. There's something about getting away from the screen for a few minutes.
Whether it's realizing what is wrong with my approach, or coming up with an entirely new one, I do my best work inside my head. Actually getting the code into the file and debugging it is the easy part.
Managers: Don't bust your developers balls because they take frequent breaks.
they have blades and move systems around to different blades based on load. IE you have a system like Jita which is on a blade by itself, and a bunch of barely populated systems on the same blade.
The real solution is they need to recode the server side of the game and put it on a mainframe. That's really the only type of system that has the IO capability necessary to do it right. Of course that might cost more money than CCP makes;)
In eve there are large numbers of barely populated systems. Skills at placing sell orders and contracts overcome "nobody will ever see my order" issues.
Anyone that complains about trade/mining hub lag is causing their own problem. I started playing again, but only have a few hours a week due to social demands and I spend most of my time in systems with 2-15 people in them. I've never had any trouble selling stuff and getting a good price, or finding what I need to buy. I don't go near overcrowded areas, ever.
I have 0 lag. I've developed relationships with the locals in the systems I frequent. I prefer the "small town feel" that playing like this engenders... I interact with others but not in such a way that it ruins my gaming experience with lag.
Not to mention that we are making judgements about 100000 year temperature (and composition) cycles based on 200 years of data, completely ignoring the other ~4.55 billion years. These judgments fly in the face of paleological evidence showing the earth has been much hotter than now in the past, in a repeating cycle, long before man existed.
All we really know is that the global temperatures are rising. We have no idea why. Anyone that claims they do has a political agenda or hasn't bothered with the paleological record or the Milankovitch cycle.
I'm all for green energy etc, but predicating it on global warming is fallacious and misleading. "Because we will run out of oil in less than 100 years, need sustainable energy, we fight wars over oil, fossil fuels are filthy, and hydrocarbons cause cancer" are much better reasons, factually correct, and are scarier because we have valid evidence to support them as opposed to "Wolf!", which is based on a data set tailored and limited to fit the "man caused global warming" argument and political agenda.
Nobody is denying climate change. What is at issue is the cause of the climate change. The only acceptable answer is "We don't really know, but the *evidence* says it's been much hotter and much colder in the past, and climate change is part of the earth's natural processes".
That's all we can prove.
It's very irresponsible (in many ways) to misrepresent a theory as fact before it's been proven.
I don't think any climate scientists are idiots. However a lot of them are supported by government grants, so they have a conflict of interest. There are many cases where scientists that disagreed with the bandwagon have had their funding cut.
Streams are how information moves to network and disk.
You can't transfer bytes without a stream unless you are opening and closing a handle for every byte. If that were the case, OSX would run like so much molassis.
Further since OSX is a UNIX operating system written in C, it *has* to support streams. Streams are a part of C and UNIX and OSX is an officially certified UNIX OS.
I'm the last person to defend a federal agency, but if you run any large application through something like Fortify this will happen and this is 70 applications being tested for the first time.
High and medium vulns need to be addressed very quickly, and there were 1267 of those. Of those, 381 were on public facing systems. The remaining were "low" which are often things like "your server appears to be running Apache" or on internal systems, which while bad, is not as bad as stuff in your DMZ.
This headline is just a wee bit sensationalist.
7.63 highs per web app is not bad for the first run through, it's 100% average. Some of the apps are probably 10 years old to boot.
I don't care how good you think you are, I'll find something if I test your app. Getting your stuff tested, coming to terms with this and fixing it is *what is supposed to happen*. The fact that there are vulnerabilities on an untested app is like saying there's water in the ocean, and is almost as surprising.
I come from a code security background, and what the testers found is about as surprising as the sun coming up.
I think the *real* issue, and the one people should be fired over, is why did they wait til now to start pen-testing them and looking for code security issues?
Boggles the mind...
Realistically they need to be doing this once per quarter. I guarantee you they'll find something every time they test.
"He added that the city had never actually disseminated a policy regarding internet usage to tell workers what was inappropriate."
Without a policy, how could anything he did be unauthorized? I'm just sayin'. Hopefully his attorney remembers to mention this little tidbit at the appeal.
That aside really need to amend that law... just about everyone could be convicted of this the way it's worded.
Technically using Google and clicking the wrong link by accident could get you put in jail. Would it? Probably not, but it could if you pissed the wrong people off.
How long til surreptitious police monitoring GPS use becomes widespread and they start firing off automated speeding tickets?
How about cameras outside every residence, peering in? The cameras are on public property right? They don't require trespassing or B&E to install them right? How is this any different?
Anyone that is ok with the police doing this is a moron.
While you are at it, why not put the database of license plate to name/address online for everyone to be able to use? Your address is public right? People can see your license plate because it's public right?
Here are some things that are: Video editing (especially processing on large files, the client itself, not so much) 3d rendering photo editing during filter application just about every video game in existence web servers application servers just about every science simulation/modeling application in existence DSP
It's a decent sized chunk of the applications being used.
At least 3 drivers per day actively try to kill me while commuting, or maybe it just looks that way.
Factor in the life savings. If I could take public transportation to work I would, even with all the angry people. At least on a train they can't run you off the road or cut off a semi, and cause it to jackknife into me.
We are free to protest and say whatever we want, but if we are on public property we need to obey the law governing the use of the property. Usually this means a permit and behaving ourselves. If you break the law you get arrested.
You are free to do whatever you want on private property.
If you don't like the law, write your local delegate and lobby them to get the law changed. We the people made the law, and we can get it changed.
Usually laws governing the use of public property are local ones.
Rather than dumping more money into social security, they should cash everyone out with what's left and shut it down.
Socialism is a losing proposition; I say cut our losses and spend that money on converting from an income tax to a flat sales tax, which would get rid of the IRS too.
There all fixed. My Dad had a way of refusing to accept "can't". It's usually a nice way to say "won't" and is a coward's refusal. If the task is not impossible, can't is the wrong word to use.
>Think about it though, for gaming (if someone would ever do it). Basic OS + gaming specific API = leanest gaming OS possible.
Like DOS?
LOL.
Well, things do go in cycles :-p
>>This should work exactly as well as physically abusing your child when he or she does something wrong. That way when they are faced with conflict later in life, they follow in your steps and resort to violence.
If the kid is type A and pushing boundaries, sometimes all they understand is face down on the floor with a foot to the back of their neck.
Kids, boys especially, have a natural tendency to assert dominance or attempt to usurp the balance. It's biological. Everyone wants to be the chief. If stern words, and nothing else works, sometimes there's only one solution ;)
My son whacked me with a stick, I told him never to do it again, and he hit me harder. One sleeper hold later and he's never done it again and looks at me in a whole different light.
I did the same thing to my father and he had to put me in my place, once. That's all it took.
Every now and again they need to be put in their place. Of course you need to do it so you don't leave a mark or do any damage.
There are a lot of kids out there that could use a good asskicking. The ones that don't get it end up in prison, or continually get fired because they don't know when to shut up. Usually they are from a single parent household and being raised by a parent who doesn't have the stomach to instill proper discipline.
If you do it right you only need to do it once. Tough love is sometimes necessary. Anyone that says it isn't, and doesn't do what they need to, will pay.
Some people just have submissive kids and are lucky.
As always, every situation is different.
There are developers who have offices?
That being said, I solve most of my difficult challenges while taking a dump. I can hammer on a difficult problem for several hours, then solve it in 2 minutes on the porcelain. There's something about getting away from the screen for a few minutes.
Whether it's realizing what is wrong with my approach, or coming up with an entirely new one, I do my best work inside my head. Actually getting the code into the file and debugging it is the easy part.
Managers: Don't bust your developers balls because they take frequent breaks.
Here everyone calls their box "the CPU"...
Even if they can't afford a offsite service, the owner of the site can keep a copy of the tape in his bedroom safe.
they have blades and move systems around to different blades based on load. IE you have a system like Jita which is on a blade by itself, and a bunch of barely populated systems on the same blade.
The real solution is they need to recode the server side of the game and put it on a mainframe. That's really the only type of system that has the IO capability necessary to do it right. Of course that might cost more money than CCP makes ;)
In eve there are large numbers of barely populated systems. Skills at placing sell orders and contracts overcome "nobody will ever see my order" issues.
Anyone that complains about trade/mining hub lag is causing their own problem. I started playing again, but only have a few hours a week due to social demands and I spend most of my time in systems with 2-15 people in them. I've never had any trouble selling stuff and getting a good price, or finding what I need to buy. I don't go near overcrowded areas, ever.
I have 0 lag. I've developed relationships with the locals in the systems I frequent. I prefer the "small town feel" that playing like this engenders... I interact with others but not in such a way that it ruins my gaming experience with lag.
Not to mention that we are making judgements about 100000 year temperature (and composition) cycles based on 200 years of data, completely ignoring the other ~4.55 billion years. These judgments fly in the face of paleological evidence showing the earth has been much hotter than now in the past, in a repeating cycle, long before man existed.
All we really know is that the global temperatures are rising. We have no idea why. Anyone that claims they do has a political agenda or hasn't bothered with the paleological record or the Milankovitch cycle.
I'm all for green energy etc, but predicating it on global warming is fallacious and misleading. "Because we will run out of oil in less than 100 years, need sustainable energy, we fight wars over oil, fossil fuels are filthy, and hydrocarbons cause cancer" are much better reasons, factually correct, and are scarier because we have valid evidence to support them as opposed to "Wolf!", which is based on a data set tailored and limited to fit the "man caused global warming" argument and political agenda.
Nobody is denying climate change. What is at issue is the cause of the climate change. The only acceptable answer is "We don't really know, but the *evidence* says it's been much hotter and much colder in the past, and climate change is part of the earth's natural processes".
That's all we can prove.
It's very irresponsible (in many ways) to misrepresent a theory as fact before it's been proven.
I don't think any climate scientists are idiots. However a lot of them are supported by government grants, so they have a conflict of interest. There are many cases where scientists that disagreed with the bandwagon have had their funding cut.
http://www.scientificblogging.com/news_releases/climate_scientist_consensus_global_warming_real_other_scientists_not_so_much
I bless you with Cure Disease to fix your wheezing.
Since it affects everything in the area, you would also look like the same supermodel.
That would kill 2 birds with one stone, no pun intended =D
Streams are how information moves to network and disk.
You can't transfer bytes without a stream unless you are opening and closing a handle for every byte. If that were the case, OSX would run like so much molassis.
Further since OSX is a UNIX operating system written in C, it *has* to support streams. Streams are a part of C and UNIX and OSX is an officially certified UNIX OS.
I call it LoLJack
I'm the last person to defend a federal agency, but if you run any large application through something like Fortify this will happen and this is 70 applications being tested for the first time.
High and medium vulns need to be addressed very quickly, and there were 1267 of those. Of those, 381 were on public facing systems. The remaining were "low" which are often things like "your server appears to be running Apache" or on internal systems, which while bad, is not as bad as stuff in your DMZ.
This headline is just a wee bit sensationalist.
7.63 highs per web app is not bad for the first run through, it's 100% average. Some of the apps are probably 10 years old to boot.
I don't care how good you think you are, I'll find something if I test your app. Getting your stuff tested, coming to terms with this and fixing it is *what is supposed to happen*. The fact that there are vulnerabilities on an untested app is like saying there's water in the ocean, and is almost as surprising.
I come from a code security background, and what the testers found is about as surprising as the sun coming up.
I think the *real* issue, and the one people should be fired over, is why did they wait til now to start pen-testing them and looking for code security issues?
Boggles the mind...
Realistically they need to be doing this once per quarter. I guarantee you they'll find something every time they test.
-Viz
"He added that the city had never actually disseminated a policy regarding internet usage to tell workers what was inappropriate."
Without a policy, how could anything he did be unauthorized? I'm just sayin'. Hopefully his attorney remembers to mention this little tidbit at the appeal.
That aside really need to amend that law... just about everyone could be convicted of this the way it's worded.
Technically using Google and clicking the wrong link by accident could get you put in jail. Would it? Probably not, but it could if you pissed the wrong people off.
-Viz
How long til surreptitious police monitoring GPS use becomes widespread and they start firing off automated speeding tickets?
How about cameras outside every residence, peering in? The cameras are on public property right? They don't require trespassing or B&E to install them right? How is this any different?
Anyone that is ok with the police doing this is a moron.
-Viz
While you are at it, why not put the database of license plate to name/address online for everyone to be able to use? Your address is public right? People can see your license plate because it's public right?
You are driving in public right? /sarcasm off
Sheeple boggle the mind...
-Viz
or misconfigured.
which causes firefox to open a "choose application" which defaults to acrobat, the application.
Problem solved. It's a lot faster ;)
Here are some things that are:
Video editing (especially processing on large files, the client itself, not so much)
3d rendering
photo editing during filter application
just about every video game in existence
web servers
application servers
just about every science simulation/modeling application in existence
DSP
It's a decent sized chunk of the applications being used.
At least 3 drivers per day actively try to kill me while commuting, or maybe it just looks that way.
Factor in the life savings. If I could take public transportation to work I would, even with all the angry people. At least on a train they can't run you off the road or cut off a semi, and cause it to jackknife into me.
-Viz
This agency exists, it's called the NOAA.
We are free to protest and say whatever we want, but if we are on public property we need to obey the law governing the use of the property. Usually this means a permit and behaving ourselves. If you break the law you get arrested.
You are free to do whatever you want on private property.
If you don't like the law, write your local delegate and lobby them to get the law changed. We the people made the law, and we can get it changed.
Usually laws governing the use of public property are local ones.
-Viz
... water still makes stuff wet. Surprise surprise!
-Viz
Rather than dumping more money into social security, they should cash everyone out with what's left and shut it down.
Socialism is a losing proposition; I say cut our losses and spend that money on converting from an income tax to a flat sales tax, which would get rid of the IRS too.
-Viz
> Time Warner and Embarq can't compete.
Time Warner and Embarq won't compete.
There all fixed. My Dad had a way of refusing to accept "can't". It's usually a nice way to say "won't" and is a coward's refusal. If the task is not impossible, can't is the wrong word to use.
-Viz