I don't think I've ever interrupted anyone in an office that was even remotely concerned about their productivity. More often then not it requires me to break through a conversation about football or last weekend's events so I can continue with my productivity.
I thought it was the users of a co-op that benefited, in direct relation to their level of use. That would mean the largest commenters would get the largest shares.
If companies aren't going to respect experience, then older people are pretty much done in the industry. What is the point spending all your personal time training, only to end up completing against someone for a salary that you made 20 years ago? That's not how a career is supposed to work.
Not an accurate comparison. It was expensive to get those people over, and dangerous. Nothing compared to the quick and easy methods companies have today.
Except for the fact that there are way more situations in driving that come up then in a game of go. I don't care how many possible board positions there are.
You're not understanding me. The game is picking the next move over and over based on a small set of rules. How many times is it required to go outside those rules to make an actual decision about the next part of the game?
There are only so many people that want to put up with the inconvenience of these. Once all those people have one, then of course the market will drop.
What part of playing Go was really an advance in what we already knew about neural networks. Maybe they added a clever spin to make it good at go but did they not just use a Google neural network? Does AlphaGo even learn from game to game at all? Have they demonstrated it getting better and better as it plays and self-adapting (meaning no code changes) . or do they need to make code changes each time?
The thing that you fail to understand is that #2 will be the taxi of the future, meaning it will cost the same of the taxi. Regular taxi's will be out of business, and probably a lot cleaner by comparison. #3 will still be much cheaper, and not many will be able to afford self driving either. As for renting a car, I frequently need to pop out to a grocery store and it helps that I can drive to one and back in 15 minutes, especially in mornings when I realize my kids don't have anything fresh for me to give them for lunch. I can't see anything working but #3 quite frankly.
What percentage of playing the game of Go is the same ruleset applied over and over and over, and what percentage is an actual unique idea? I'd say it is 95% repetition with 5% decision.
I'm a tool for assuming a person having an active conversation about football actually cares about the work they are doing at that point? O-k....
So, if workshation-mode gives us peak performance and reliability, then what the hell are we receiving now?
It just means that windows will only ask you to install updates every 10 minutes if the CPU is busy, rather than the usual 5.
Unless you're jailbroken there is little reason to not drink the kool-aid
FIFY
Last time I checked, thunderbolt hubs were difficult to find on Amazon for $10 like USB ports.
I do it over Skype with my developers. Works fine.
Or living in the other 99% of the world that isn't a tech hot spot.
I don't think I've ever interrupted anyone in an office that was even remotely concerned about their productivity. More often then not it requires me to break through a conversation about football or last weekend's events so I can continue with my productivity.
I think they should add a feature where people can write stories. They could call it Stories.
But they still have to have those people doing SOMETHING don't they? Twitter is a simple idea and it has been the same since its inception.
Covfefe
I thought it was the users of a co-op that benefited, in direct relation to their level of use. That would mean the largest commenters would get the largest shares.
I thought the largest users of a co-op got the money from a co-op proportionate to their use. That would be the largest contributor of comments.
If companies aren't going to respect experience, then older people are pretty much done in the industry. What is the point spending all your personal time training, only to end up completing against someone for a salary that you made 20 years ago? That's not how a career is supposed to work.
Not an accurate comparison. It was expensive to get those people over, and dangerous. Nothing compared to the quick and easy methods companies have today.
I thought that was a major feature expected for the Tesla Model 3.
But pizza delivery robots will save lives!
If cheap global labor were available at the time that automobiles were invented, you actually think they would have used domestic labor as they did?
Except for the fact that there are way more situations in driving that come up then in a game of go. I don't care how many possible board positions there are.
You're not understanding me. The game is picking the next move over and over based on a small set of rules. How many times is it required to go outside those rules to make an actual decision about the next part of the game?
There are only so many people that want to put up with the inconvenience of these. Once all those people have one, then of course the market will drop.
What part of playing Go was really an advance in what we already knew about neural networks. Maybe they added a clever spin to make it good at go but did they not just use a Google neural network? Does AlphaGo even learn from game to game at all? Have they demonstrated it getting better and better as it plays and self-adapting (meaning no code changes) . or do they need to make code changes each time?
The thing that you fail to understand is that #2 will be the taxi of the future, meaning it will cost the same of the taxi. Regular taxi's will be out of business, and probably a lot cleaner by comparison. #3 will still be much cheaper, and not many will be able to afford self driving either. As for renting a car, I frequently need to pop out to a grocery store and it helps that I can drive to one and back in 15 minutes, especially in mornings when I realize my kids don't have anything fresh for me to give them for lunch. I can't see anything working but #3 quite frankly.
What percentage of playing the game of Go is the same ruleset applied over and over and over, and what percentage is an actual unique idea? I'd say it is 95% repetition with 5% decision.
Nothing about Go involves understanding the world or people. Everything about driving involves understanding the world and people.
But volume groups were not being mirrored correctly to the DR site.
Ok I know I'm late to the party but that tells me that it was an IT issue right there.