If Moose bloat bothers you, you use a stripped-down Moose.
Moo is currently pretty popular. I often use Mouse at work
(it's installed more universally there) and haven't seen many
problems with it.
I first got disillusioned with Perl many years ago when I realized I couldn't even read my own code!
The number of people who think this is a witty thing to say still
amazes me to this day. So, uh, you have no sense of discipline,
you don't know how to organize code and are incapable of writing
documentation, and you think this makes you a way cool hip
programmer dude because, uh...
With the protests going on every other day here in Oakland, CA and the authorities apparent need to keep an eye on them with three helicopters in the air, hovering in place, I've been thinking a lot lately about how much fuel they'd save if they got a clue about lighter-than air vehicles.
The idea that the risks of nuclear power are anywhere near the
scale of the problem with global warming is completely deranged--
the fact that someone who can string coherent sentences together
is willing to embrace blithering idiocy on that scale is a sad
comment on the state of our intellectual discourse.
The way this argument goes is that the shuttle would've been able
to take lighter payloads to a higher orbit, but the USAF design
contraints screwed that up. So we got a shuttle-to-LEO when all
the action (the satellites it was supposed to service) were up in
GEO.
Actually, I think it's a problem that the anti-systemd forces
keep going on about "the unix way" and what-not... haven't they
been paying attention to the way things really work? (Hint: if
esr says it, it's probably not quite right. [1])
Perl kicked Bourne butt by merging nearly everything you want
into one process-- that's something you'd think a sysadmin
would've noticed.
It is however a point that betting your system security on a new,
gigantic project is kind of dubious, and I have a lot of sympathy
with people objecting to gratuitious changes that obsolete
decades worth of learning on how to manage a unix box.
[1] The actual "Unix Way" is "do one thing sort-of-okay and trick it
out with options, configuration files and customization languages
until you can't tell if it's going to fry eggs or go to the
bathroom".
There's no way I'm going to compromise with those no-nuclear
people. They say they care about climate change, but are willing
to risk the planet as long as they don't have to admit they were
wrong.
"Sys-V is an utter shambles"
Yeah, I wouldn't say I'm up on the SystemD controversy, but I
would've thought that was the whole point. The old-style of
system startup fires off so many processes, I've often thought
you might be able to speed up a laptop boot quite a bit if you
just wrote one perl script that did all of that stuff. It could
even use the existing rc.d mess as an input format, read it all
in once, and stash the info in a sane, single-file format...
That happens to me all the time, too. I haven't yet sat down to track it down. If I cut and paste some text from slashdot into a firefox textarea (also on slashdot), it gets converted to Latin-1 somewhere along the way.
I sincerely hope this is not a slashdot bug in this day and age.
I would guess it has to do with my linux configuration... I run
icewm on a stale version of ubuntu at the moment, maybe something more gnomeish would deal.
Weren't mirrors placed on the face of the moon by the Apollo astronauts that reflect light pointed from the earth? Doesn't this prove astronauts were up there? I'm curious how the deniers account for the mirrors.
Without being up on the state-of-the-art in this field, I would
guess that there are many variant scenarios. Maybe Apollo 8 was
real (lunar orbit without landing), but they were nervous about
getting Apollo 11 to work on time, so they did another Apollo 8
with some faked telemetry, but they actually did do some real
landings later, with Apollo 12 and so on. Or maybe they never
did a human landing, but they dumped some crud on the surface so
that people playing with telescopes would see something that
looked like traces of landings.
The question I would ask is why is it on this particular subject
that some people have chosen to treat with aggressive, extreme
skepticism. What makes a lunar landing seem so absurd to them
that they'd rather believe anything else happened? Needless to
say, there's a certain satisfiaction with feeling like you're one
of the elite that knows The Truth, but still, there's plenty of
those around...
Here's a Truth for you: there really are no lunar landing
denialists, that's actually all just a foreign conspiracy
intended to undermine belief in the American government and
American technology.
It's bad I suppose when conspiracy theorists are flat out wrong, but would a repressive government try to silence them or do repressive governments only bother suppressing people who are telling the Truth?
At last, someone with an interesting question concerning "The
Theory of Conspiracy".
I think the answer is that only a very stupid repressive
government would bother suppressing conspiranoids,
a slicker operation would like having conspiranoids around
because no one takes them seriously and they can easily be used
to discredit belief in the actual conspiracies that the powers-that-be are
engaged in.
Actually they do and can but no one wants to listen. People just want a quick fix. It's called a well balanced diet and exercise..
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On the contrary, the fix is exercise and a well-balanced diet.
I know this is kind of wild and crazy, but could it be that
Firefox is developing this weird reputation of egocentric
designers intent on pissing-off long term users because there's
actually some truth in it?
I have a pre-condition: if Lessig can swear that he's not going
to hand this cash over to tea-party nutjobs just because they
were willing to make noises (that week) about being in favor of "campaign
finance reform", I might consider kicking-in.
Also: blekko.com, startpage.com. There's no particular need to use google for web searches any more.
If Moose bloat bothers you, you use a stripped-down Moose. Moo is currently pretty popular. I often use Mouse at work (it's installed more universally there) and haven't seen many problems with it.
The number of people who think this is a witty thing to say still amazes me to this day. So, uh, you have no sense of discipline, you don't know how to organize code and are incapable of writing documentation, and you think this makes you a way cool hip programmer dude because, uh...
The nice thing about perl culture, though, is you don't have to deal with quite so many people who think esr knows what he's talking about.
With the protests going on every other day here in Oakland, CA and the authorities apparent need to keep an eye on them with three helicopters in the air, hovering in place, I've been thinking a lot lately about how much fuel they'd save if they got a clue about lighter-than air vehicles.
Fads in IT? Unheard of.
The idea that the risks of nuclear power are anywhere near the scale of the problem with global warming is completely deranged-- the fact that someone who can string coherent sentences together is willing to embrace blithering idiocy on that scale is a sad comment on the state of our intellectual discourse.
Q: "Why did they use segmented SRBs?"
A: Because Morton-Thiokol is in Utah, without a sea-port, and the pieces had to fit on trains or trucks.
Q: So why didn't they go with a company that did have ocean access, like Aerojet in Sacramento? A: James Feltcher was from Utah.
The way this argument goes is that the shuttle would've been able to take lighter payloads to a higher orbit, but the USAF design contraints screwed that up. So we got a shuttle-to-LEO when all the action (the satellites it was supposed to service) were up in GEO.
Now now, no point in arguing with a slashbot response. "Oh who cares about this, I thought of this in high school."
Actually, I think it's a problem that the anti-systemd forces keep going on about "the unix way" and what-not... haven't they been paying attention to the way things really work? (Hint: if esr says it, it's probably not quite right. [1])
Perl kicked Bourne butt by merging nearly everything you want into one process-- that's something you'd think a sysadmin would've noticed.
It is however a point that betting your system security on a new, gigantic project is kind of dubious, and I have a lot of sympathy with people objecting to gratuitious changes that obsolete decades worth of learning on how to manage a unix box.
[1] The actual "Unix Way" is "do one thing sort-of-okay and trick it out with options, configuration files and customization languages until you can't tell if it's going to fry eggs or go to the bathroom".
No, it'll all be rolled into libgnome. One library to rule them all.
There's no way I'm going to compromise with those no-nuclear people. They say they care about climate change, but are willing to risk the planet as long as they don't have to admit they were wrong.
if you can't use it to drop bombs, what good is it?
Clearly if the OP really wanted to talk about systemd, he should've asked people to talk about pulseaudio.
This certainly explains web designer syndrome, doesn't it?
Yup. Famous blowhard makes noise about something else for for awhile. Time to worry, but maybe not about GMOs.
"Sys-V is an utter shambles"
Yeah, I wouldn't say I'm up on the SystemD controversy, but I would've thought that was the whole point. The old-style of system startup fires off so many processes, I've often thought you might be able to speed up a laptop boot quite a bit if you just wrote one perl script that did all of that stuff. It could even use the existing rc.d mess as an input format, read it all in once, and stash the info in a sane, single-file format...
That happens to me all the time, too. I haven't yet sat down to track it down. If I cut and paste some text from slashdot into a firefox textarea (also on slashdot), it gets converted to Latin-1 somewhere along the way. I sincerely hope this is not a slashdot bug in this day and age. I would guess it has to do with my linux configuration... I run icewm on a stale version of ubuntu at the moment, maybe something more gnomeish would deal.
I only believe in the best conspiracy theories, myself.
Without being up on the state-of-the-art in this field, I would guess that there are many variant scenarios. Maybe Apollo 8 was real (lunar orbit without landing), but they were nervous about getting Apollo 11 to work on time, so they did another Apollo 8 with some faked telemetry, but they actually did do some real landings later, with Apollo 12 and so on. Or maybe they never did a human landing, but they dumped some crud on the surface so that people playing with telescopes would see something that looked like traces of landings.
The question I would ask is why is it on this particular subject that some people have chosen to treat with aggressive, extreme skepticism. What makes a lunar landing seem so absurd to them that they'd rather believe anything else happened? Needless to say, there's a certain satisfiaction with feeling like you're one of the elite that knows The Truth, but still, there's plenty of those around...
Here's a Truth for you: there really are no lunar landing denialists, that's actually all just a foreign conspiracy intended to undermine belief in the American government and American technology.
At last, someone with an interesting question concerning "The Theory of Conspiracy".
I think the answer is that only a very stupid repressive government would bother suppressing conspiranoids, a slicker operation would like having conspiranoids around because no one takes them seriously and they can easily be used to discredit belief in the actual conspiracies that the powers-that-be are engaged in.
On the contrary, the fix is exercise and a well-balanced diet.
I know this is kind of wild and crazy, but could it be that Firefox is developing this weird reputation of egocentric designers intent on pissing-off long term users because there's actually some truth in it?
I have a pre-condition: if Lessig can swear that he's not going to hand this cash over to tea-party nutjobs just because they were willing to make noises (that week) about being in favor of "campaign finance reform", I might consider kicking-in.