Yup. I was flipping channels on the (old school) TV a few weeks back and one of those funniest home videos type shows from the US actually had a dedicated "ow my balls" segment although they called it something else.
I'm always surprised to learn about such progressive countries which doesn't have separation of church and state. The fact that an organization have to prove it is a religion on order to issue marriages seems so medieval.
Where did you get the idea that marriages can only be officiated by religious clerics in NZ? That's an assumption you've made all by yourself.
In NZ, individuals can apply to be marriage celebrants, and organisations that "uphold or promotes religious beliefs, or philosophical or humanitarian convictions" can apply to be able to nominate their own celebrants. The article mentions examples like Yoga and Humanist organisations as non religious groups that have already done so.
And you can do the civil office thing too without a celebrant.
But, yeah, time to move on I think. OS/2 is relegated to neckbeard's still maintaining their Amigas and C/64 machines playing block/character graphics games.
I'm still pissed they never finished the PowerPC version!
It's all an evil plot to cross-breed Theo's masturbating monkeys with Bill Gates winged monkeys to produce monkeys who can both simultaneously fly and masturbate.
The last time they tried cross-breeding anything with Bill's winged monkeys they ended up with gargoyles that looked a lot like Steve Ballmer.
Of course Steve Ballmer himself was an earlier result of cross-breeding Mr Blobby and Uncle Fester.
LibreSSL seems to have been immune to somewhere between half and two thirds of OpenSSL vulnerabilities recently. Not perfect, but a significant improvement.
Early on this was mostly due to the amount of outdated crap they deleted (less attack surface area), but as time goes on more and more will hopefully be due to improving the code that was left behind.
In most textbooks, the units are metric. This has been the same since I was in school in the 70's. It's just real life that is SI, and for some reason, real life seems to stick better. Still, there are plenty of things that are in metric units. Engine sizes and soda bottles (but not cans) being the examples that immediately spring to mind. Oddly enough, most American cars have nuts and bolts that are metric because we want to seem cool and hip, but most Japanese cars (manufactured for the USA) have SI nuts and bolts because they are pandering to Americans.
Are you talking about a different 'SI' that I'm not aware of? Unless someone is being overly pedantic, for day to day usage SI and metric are effectively the same thing.
Although a number of variants of the metric system emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the term is now often used as a synonym for "SI" or the "International System of Units"
I disagree. Learning supposedly useless subjects like maths and art etc seem to help in wiring up neurons in your teenage brain to be able to unconsciously think or see better than otherwise.
It isn't the specific details of the math subject matter that is the benefit - that stuff is forgotten. I don't directly use any math techniques in my day to day life, but I can appreciate how a few years of learning it and practising solving problems in things like geometry, trig and calculus has given me a really intuitive feel for quantities, spaces and their changing relationships etc that I wouldn't have had without it.
Long term, learning is less about retaining specifics and more about training your brain to be able to learn stuff. Different subjects can exercise different pathways and it's all potentially valuable.
Your conscious mind may have forgotten all the specifics, but your unconscious mind has been improved by that practice and given your intuition a better starting point when solving new problems. And you may not really be aware of it.
No learning is completely useless. Although some teaching can be completely useless.
Most of the art classes I've taken in school really didn't allow any free expression. Most of there were something along the lines of create a copy of what the teacher does.
I had the opposite experience. Our art teacher mostly left us to it. He'd often turn up late hungover or stoned and just sit in the corner with his sunglasses on. Other times he'd do his own paid portrait work in class while he left us to it. He was (still is) a nationally recognised artist.
Think about that for a moment, folks. That's a QUARTER of a fucking CENTURY. Many Slashdotters weren't even born then, and for most of the rest, it's still been more than half of their lifetime.
What? Are you telling me there are Slashdotters under 40? Wow!
Seeing as though there's nobody on the lawn, I thought all the youngsters were all off twitting their instachats or something.
"Yeah, in California the only destructive effect of a 4.0 is to derail all conversation into everybody recounting the worst quake they've been through this week."
I wonder how the crema reacts in free fall. Can they foam milk?
These are very important questions NASA will need answers for when we want to get tired TV producers, insurance salesmen, personnel officers, public relations executives, management consultants etc to colonise another planet.
Yup. I was flipping channels on the (old school) TV a few weeks back and one of those funniest home videos type shows from the US actually had a dedicated "ow my balls" segment although they called it something else.
Do you think 'Informative' would be a better moderation?
Where did you get the idea that marriages can only be officiated by religious clerics in NZ? That's an assumption you've made all by yourself.
In NZ, individuals can apply to be marriage celebrants, and organisations that "uphold or promotes religious beliefs, or philosophical or humanitarian convictions" can apply to be able to nominate their own celebrants. The article mentions examples like Yoga and Humanist organisations as non religious groups that have already done so.
And you can do the civil office thing too without a celebrant.
Heh, that reminded me of some other 70s 'sci fi' usage of units:
http://galacticafanfic.com/ima...
But is has shown that there isn't anything stopping that kind of person from running the CIA.
I'm still pissed they never finished the PowerPC version!
(Nah not really. I'm just making that up)
An Amiga? Sure it didn't have memory protection (ie Guru Meditations) but it did have preemptive multitasking.
The last time they tried cross-breeding anything with Bill's winged monkeys they ended up with gargoyles that looked a lot like Steve Ballmer.
Of course Steve Ballmer himself was an earlier result of cross-breeding Mr Blobby and Uncle Fester.
Position description of a Business Analist: When it comes to business time, someone who gets the big jobs through the back door.
In London? Polite? Nah..... they would've meant something else.
LibreSSL seems to have been immune to somewhere between half and two thirds of OpenSSL vulnerabilities recently. Not perfect, but a significant improvement.
Early on this was mostly due to the amount of outdated crap they deleted (less attack surface area), but as time goes on more and more will hopefully be due to improving the code that was left behind.
There's still a long way to go though.
Here (NZ) they're nominally called 100x50 but the actual dimensions differ for green gauged (94x47) or dressed (90x45).
Are you talking about a different 'SI' that I'm not aware of? Unless someone is being overly pedantic, for day to day usage SI and metric are effectively the same thing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M...
quote:
Kerberos is actually a good example of how attitudes at MS have changed over the years.
http://linux.slashdot.org/stor...
MS ended up opening up their extensions so that MIT and Samba etc could implement them freely.
Also as a non Java coder who used to be able to mostly read Java, I found Generics have put a stop to that.
Java might've been kinda sorta easy to read a decade ago, but it isn't now.
Linux md RAID10 is a 'non standard' single level layout that does not have a RAID0 component/layer.
There are 3 layouts available for it, one of which can mimic the underlying block layout of the 'standard' layered/nested RAID10.
I disagree. Learning supposedly useless subjects like maths and art etc seem to help in wiring up neurons in your teenage brain to be able to unconsciously think or see better than otherwise.
It isn't the specific details of the math subject matter that is the benefit - that stuff is forgotten. I don't directly use any math techniques in my day to day life, but I can appreciate how a few years of learning it and practising solving problems in things like geometry, trig and calculus has given me a really intuitive feel for quantities, spaces and their changing relationships etc that I wouldn't have had without it.
Long term, learning is less about retaining specifics and more about training your brain to be able to learn stuff. Different subjects can exercise different pathways and it's all potentially valuable.
Your conscious mind may have forgotten all the specifics, but your unconscious mind has been improved by that practice and given your intuition a better starting point when solving new problems. And you may not really be aware of it.
No learning is completely useless. Although some teaching can be completely useless.
I had the opposite experience. Our art teacher mostly left us to it. He'd often turn up late hungover or stoned and just sit in the corner with his sunglasses on. Other times he'd do his own paid portrait work in class while he left us to it. He was (still is) a nationally recognised artist.
It was fun though :)
What? Are you telling me there are Slashdotters under 40? Wow!
Seeing as though there's nobody on the lawn, I thought all the youngsters were all off twitting their instachats or something.
Don't be so sure, there's always more than meets the eye with Transformers.
Is that like Ruby on Rails?
You had oxen? We had to domesticate our own animals!
Let me fix that for you:
"Yeah, in California the only destructive effect of a 4.0 is to derail all conversation into everybody recounting the worst quake they've been through this week."
Sounds like he's doing a Moon over Marin. I hope the existing residents still find time to exercise.
These are very important questions NASA will need answers for when we want to get tired TV producers, insurance salesmen, personnel officers, public relations executives, management consultants etc to colonise another planet.