So, my 9 year old daughter, AB blooded, must be a beer addict, her white cotton socks must be too used to get transparent, the moon at the other side of the world must keep on affecting meanwhile she stays in the daylight with no moon at all in the sky, lying down in the sofa to watch Disney Channel must make her breath a lot of lactic acid, her white summer clothes must be dirt to death and... Dammit! She must be expecting!!!
Good to know (I didn't know it). Thank you! I guess we humans trend to extrapolate (temporary) local data as a whole. We have to think in a wider (temporal) range.
Most of the problems raise when big numbers are translated to small teams. Probably, a 10% of a big corporation staff deserves to be fired, but that's not appliable to 10% of every team. Maybe several teams deserve to be fired alltogether (boss included) and some teams deserve an extra-bonus (ok, boss included), but the big numbers should achieve those global percentages.
Bad bosses apply the corporate percentages top down without changes because it is easier to manage and they can say "I'm not mean, it's the rule" but he is part of the problem. The spreading of the percentages should be distributed through the organization weightened according to the contribution of the teams and sub-teams, so there could be an uneven punishing policy, which is counterintuitively far much more fair.
No interconnection means great useless silos. SMTP is the nowadays latin interlingo among companies. I'm hopeless because FB, G+, TT and the like should become a federation (at least in the inter-posting-protocol), which is quite difficult to achieve. In an ideal goal, post shouldn't actually travel, but notifications, and your favourite post-browser would be just a viewer (non storer) of the posted-outside messages. To make it nore complicated, there should be sort of a "ad earnings clearing house" to make it profitable for everyone. I don't think it'll happen ever. Long live to SMTP.
After RTFA I found it at the end of page 4. He's talking about d3.js:
"Cunningham: Let me close with an example that is close to me today. I was looking to make things move on the screen and I fell upon this d3.js library. It's a nice library with a lot of examples of it doing impressive things. And then the code for those examples is 20, 30, 40 lines. And then I read the introductory material, and it says, here's our philosophy, and I agree with their philosophy. I like the picture and I like the look of the code. It's only 40 lines, but every line carried some careful thought."
How about 50's - 60's DC Comics' classics like Captain Marvel [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Marvel_(DC_Comics)] or even... Superman [no need to link]. Maybe something newer, yet classic, like Jeff Smith's Bone [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_(comics)]
Third world is not a proof because, unfortunately, non surviving children unbalances the sample. There are no adult asthma cases when they died at three. There where no Alzheimer cases when life expectancy was shorter than today.
I've just noticed this is like those unicycle DIY Segways: One single rocket + 2 axis + 3 accelerometers + gravity = stable position (XYZ) . Have in mind current drones have more than one engine (to correct position) and '60s rockets had lots of hydrazine mini jets to fine tune orientation. Good job NASA.
I used to play an ancient video game called "Lunar Lander" (less famous than Asteroids) where you had to manually do what computer controls right now without blinking. One less game to play with.
You are right, but my point is about benchmarking. If you use a set of tests (compiled SW, binary executables using some system libraries), those tests are supposed to perform some tasks in the current devices. If they had used a quantum computer to test an hypotetical "Windows 28" with the current tests, the results would have been as distorted as using a "Windows 3.11 to Windows 95 benchmark suite" over a current dual core 64bit CPU.
I wish the test was done with a weaker machine. I guess the gap is achieved by a better usage of higher HW/FW which will not be noticeable in a non-quad-core machine.
The only chance to succeed is to offer the same front-end APIs/runtime/libs to work (adapted) on true Linux OS. You probably won't have full acceess to Posix, neither a hi-res screen in Tizen, but its native apps should run bigger and faster in a desktop just recompiling (or even better without recompiling).
Develop once, run it everywhere. That's the only missing offer in the smartphone/tablet ecosystem nowadays (I'm skeptic about W8 promises).
Now you can sue Nasa just like in the Street View scenario. I realised they caught me naked in one image, so I request Nasa to blur the pixel where I appear on.
Nice NASA IAC document. You can avoid Sheldon-level buzz wording going directly to page 54 where average Howard Wolowitz engineers can understand a great summary.
The voice of the (bad) experience is not always a good advise.
So, my 9 year old daughter, AB blooded, must be a beer addict, her white cotton socks must be too used to get transparent, the moon at the other side of the world must keep on affecting meanwhile she stays in the daylight with no moon at all in the sky, lying down in the sofa to watch Disney Channel must make her breath a lot of lactic acid, her white summer clothes must be dirt to death and... Dammit! She must be expecting!!!
Yes indeed, very good point.
Good to know (I didn't know it). Thank you! I guess we humans trend to extrapolate (temporary) local data as a whole. We have to think in a wider (temporal) range.
Tell about it to New York people. I've heard it is getting windier there by.
Don't ask for further medical insurance support if you don't have a former medical prescription.
...as soon he realizes Amy Farrah Fowler is Higgs Blossom
Most of the problems raise when big numbers are translated to small teams. Probably, a 10% of a big corporation staff deserves to be fired, but that's not appliable to 10% of every team. Maybe several teams deserve to be fired alltogether (boss included) and some teams deserve an extra-bonus (ok, boss included), but the big numbers should achieve those global percentages.
Bad bosses apply the corporate percentages top down without changes because it is easier to manage and they can say "I'm not mean, it's the rule" but he is part of the problem. The spreading of the percentages should be distributed through the organization weightened according to the contribution of the teams and sub-teams, so there could be an uneven punishing policy, which is counterintuitively far much more fair.
Mac-Light: It won't get you fat, it is Higgs Boson free.
No interconnection means great useless silos. SMTP is the nowadays latin interlingo among companies. I'm hopeless because FB, G+, TT and the like should become a federation (at least in the inter-posting-protocol), which is quite difficult to achieve. In an ideal goal, post shouldn't actually travel, but notifications, and your favourite post-browser would be just a viewer (non storer) of the posted-outside messages. To make it nore complicated, there should be sort of a "ad earnings clearing house" to make it profitable for everyone. I don't think it'll happen ever. Long live to SMTP.
Invest your money safely on Facebook so we can waste one more billion, or two ;-)
Edison = Jobs, Tesla = Ritchie
After RTFA I found it at the end of page 4. He's talking about d3.js:
"Cunningham: Let me close with an example that is close to me today. I was looking to make things move on the screen and I fell upon this d3.js library. It's a nice library with a lot of examples of it doing impressive things. And then the code for those examples is 20, 30, 40 lines. And then I read the introductory material, and it says, here's our philosophy, and I agree with their philosophy. I like the picture and I like the look of the code. It's only 40 lines, but every line carried some careful thought."
Agreed
How about 50's - 60's DC Comics' classics like Captain Marvel [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Marvel_(DC_Comics)] or even... Superman [no need to link]. Maybe something newer, yet classic, like Jeff Smith's Bone [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_(comics)]
Third world is not a proof because, unfortunately, non surviving children unbalances the sample. There are no adult asthma cases when they died at three. There where no Alzheimer cases when life expectancy was shorter than today.
A long time ago it was published at http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html and I find it quite useful to select the most appropriate to do a quick choice
I've just noticed this is like those unicycle DIY Segways: One single rocket + 2 axis + 3 accelerometers + gravity = stable position (XYZ) . Have in mind current drones have more than one engine (to correct position) and '60s rockets had lots of hydrazine mini jets to fine tune orientation. Good job NASA.
I used to play an ancient video game called "Lunar Lander" (less famous than Asteroids) where you had to manually do what computer controls right now without blinking. One less game to play with.
You are right, but my point is about benchmarking. If you use a set of tests (compiled SW, binary executables using some system libraries), those tests are supposed to perform some tasks in the current devices. If they had used a quantum computer to test an hypotetical "Windows 28" with the current tests, the results would have been as distorted as using a "Windows 3.11 to Windows 95 benchmark suite" over a current dual core 64bit CPU.
I wish the test was done with a weaker machine. I guess the gap is achieved by a better usage of higher HW/FW which will not be noticeable in a non-quad-core machine.
The only chance to succeed is to offer the same front-end APIs/runtime/libs to work (adapted) on true Linux OS. You probably won't have full acceess to Posix, neither a hi-res screen in Tizen, but its native apps should run bigger and faster in a desktop just recompiling (or even better without recompiling). Develop once, run it everywhere. That's the only missing offer in the smartphone/tablet ecosystem nowadays (I'm skeptic about W8 promises).
Now you can sue Nasa just like in the Street View scenario. I realised they caught me naked in one image, so I request Nasa to blur the pixel where I appear on.
Nice NASA IAC document. You can avoid Sheldon-level buzz wording going directly to page 54 where average Howard Wolowitz engineers can understand a great summary.
Will it be a hospital failure? Wil it be IBM the responsible? Maybe the one who earned money with it...