Then I'd love to trade lives with you. That's exactly the religious mindset I was inundated with growing up, and it's what my sister's teaching her kids.
I'm not sure I follow what you're saying. Is your point that it's just as rational to constantly change views of superhuman beings in order to hold on to religious beliefs (I've never seen Satan described as more than a tempter -- there's certainly no indication that God gave him such power of creation to physically affect physics, geology, biology, etc in such a way to make the universe appear much older than 6000 years old) than to accept such evidence as face value? If so, I think we have different views of rationality.
Because there's nothing more that kids love more than history lessons.
Seriously, most kids have access to a computer these days. Those with the interest and aptitude will find themselves in the industry or academia, more likely through gaming than through history.
Re:Bad for the open source community and for softw
on
Qt 4.8.0 Released
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· Score: 5, Informative
And the rest of the note says that the delta between commercial and LGPL versions is not desired on their part and they want to get the changes into the LGPL version by the next point release. Hopefully in the process they'll better streamline the process so the two versions stay in sync, but nothing seems to suggest that they're trying to deliberately differentiate the two; in fact, the post referenced says just the opposite.
More people are living in urban areas, and urban zones that don't currently warrant a rail system one day will. We may not be retro-fitting current cities, but it doesn't mean that we shouldn't explore new transportation items for developing cities.
Like it or not, the states are not independent. From agriculture to technology, California (really, the whole west coast) and its resources are important to the whole nation. As long as interstate commerce exists, it's in the country's best interest to what it can to safeguard every state and its citizens against natural disaster.
Not to mention the fact that the US has federal installations all over (such as military bases), so monitoring programs really are a national concern.
So many libraries exist to help with flaws/lack of functionality in vanilla JS. Perhaps the libraries that come out-of-the-box with Dart get rid of the need for such libraries (though it will probably have its own issues, thus resulting in Dart-specific libraries). And again, the libraries won't suddenly become unusable, as Javascript engines will still exist to utilize them.
The whole point of the "type" attribute in the script tag is that a browser can support multiple scripting languages. The introduction of Dart wouldn't necessitate dropping JS for the browser, but if other browsers implemented it (or Google created extensions for other browsers), it would provide an alternative.
PLoS ONE has a high impact factor, and it's gotten there very quickly. In one year it jumped from #25 to #12 in biology journals. And some people publish there because they prefer its business model and want to support openness.
Much of the excitement in football (as in all sports) comes from watching humans with tremendous talent who spend a huge amount of time developing that talent. Like any other sport, strategy is important. But the strategy is partially built around the strengths and weaknesses of the actual humans who make up the team, as well as those of the members of the opposing team.
I'm not a huge football fan, but I recognize the difference between multiplying a fairly arbitrary number representing "will" or "skill" by the random roll of a die and a team of people who are fatigued, injured, and withstanding adverse weather conditions, pushing themselves to the utmost limit not only for themselves, but for their team and the millions of people cheering them on towards victory.
When I'm designing a solution, I don't ask if it works, I was if it works well. Is it secure? Is it scalable? What are the risks associated with it? Is it full of kludges that make bad implementations easy? What do I do if a user decides she doesn't trust that functionality and turns it off?
And the point of the article wasn't to say that people shouldn't use cookies when developing web site or applications. Rather, it's an examination of how a sub-optimal solution came to be so that perhaps other people can avoid similar pitfalls in the future.
That's not exactly true. While modern printer touchpads have helped out with the situation, push-button systems, generally speaking, aren't as efficient for creating a UI control systems for complex machines. Every time I use one it feels like a kludge, overextending the button interface. On the other hand, a rich widget toolkit (if you have a good UI designer) really can make the overall experience quicker and easier. Not to mention the fact that it would be fairly trivial to set up multiple levels of interfaces exposing on the necessary commands to different classes of users.
I consider this more of an evolution of the current printer touch interface than a revolution in printing, but I at least like the concept (can't comment on the implementation since I haven't seen it).
Or perhaps we shouldn't just rely on reciting a litany of facts in hope of winning an argument. Rather, engage in a debate using questions that guide the other person into applying their own logic to the dicussion so that they reach their own reasonably sound conclusion. Don't try to win an argument, let the other person win your argument for you.
I think you're conflating a solitary nature with social ineptitude. It sounds like you do fine in social situations but prefer alone time. When I think of social ineptitude, I picture people who can't recognize social cues, respond appropriately to a social situation, lack of ability to help defuse a potentially volatile situation, etc. This is what can be a problem. Simply liking activities that are more solo or preferring large amounts of alone time aren't in the same category, in my opinion.
1) While it's nice that it has a keyboard dock, it appears that the dock may only support the iPad in portrait mode (they placement of the connector on the long side of the iPad made it seem a bit precarious for putting in a docked mode).
2) Nothing said about mouse support. Seriously, if I'm going to be using it for any type of document creation (and they seem to think people will, as they're providing iWorks in the app store), I don't want to have to use the screen for copy and paste. Lack of mouse support would be a killer for me.
3) Main screen is nothing but icons to get into applications. With more screen real estate there should be support for widgets on the home screen (as I understand it, iPhones and iPod touches don't allow that--one must jailbreak a phone and do it manually).
I'm sure there are more, but those are some things that pop right out at me. As others have said, it really looks like the worst of both worlds. Not as portable as a smartphone, not as good at document creation as a netbook or notebook. eBooks, papers, and mags seem to be the only things to gain from this device.
It depends on how the Exchange server is set up. For industries that demand security, such as healthcare, Exchange servers tend to require that mobile devices support things like encryption and remote wipe. In order for the device to connect, it has to tell the server that it supports any of these capabilities required by the server. Android's default email client doesn't. The Touchdown app does report capabilities back, but it's basically fudging the truth in order to connect (that's my understanding, anyway). Some admins have glommed on to this trick and are refusing to let Android devices connect at all.
So no, Android isn't ready for the enterprise. I have the HTC Eris and love it. I work at a research/teaching hospital, though, and probably wouldn't be able to use it for work. That's fine by me, but anyone who got the phone in order to keep up with work is going to be quite disappointed.
There are many different forms of PKC, including PKC delta, the one that seems to be in question here according to recent publications from this lab. Specifically, a caspase enzyme is cleaving PKC delta into a smaller protein, and it's this cleaved version that appears to be causing the damage to the dopamine neurons in the nigra. Caspases mediate programmed cell death, and the compound in the paper I looked at blocks a certain caspase that was activated by the presence of certain metals.
So while PKC and caspases are found widely throughout the body, there's actually a fair degree of specificity in the current model. Of course it's still early, and there are things to worry about, such as a possible increased likelihood for cancer (caspase 3 may be involved in breast cancer). But if this particular interaction between capase 3 and PKC delta can be successfully blocked without harm to other systems, we may have a good treatment on our hands.
I think extensions for office suites make quite a bit of sense, actually. If you're deploying in an enterprise, extensions can make it much easier to integrate the suite with current applications and workflow. Say you've got some kind of accounting or auditing system that you want your spreadsheet to interface with. With KOffice you now have a couple of options, scripting or writing an extension. The better solution depends on the particular case, of course, but that kind of customization makes an office suite much more appealing. And there are many niches, such as integrating a word processor with a citation manager, that don't belong at all in the core product.
I'd guess no. I believe it was V.S. Ramachandran who demonstrated that he could fool the brain into getting rid of phantom limb pain by using mirrors so that the visual system interpreted the remaining limb as being the missing limb (which leads into questions about blind people and phantom limbs, for which I don't have the answer and am too lazy to look it up). If one had an appendage that looked like an arm doing the things the brain was commanding the arm to do(and possibly requiring some tactile feedback as well), the brain would probably just interpret that appendage as the missing limb instead of creating a representation as a 3d arm.
Or I could be totally wrong. Wouldn't be the first time.
This is a squarely consumer product from a small company with limited developer resources. According to Net Applications, Windows and Mac make up a bit over 98% of the consumer OS base. While people may disagree over methodology, these are the two major platforms used by Eye-Fi's target demo. Expending resources on Linux support probably doesn't make financial sense for them.
I primarily use Linux, and I love it, but it's not Eye-Fi's responsibility to make Linux more appealing by having applications available for the platform.
Visio will export to HTML with working hyperlinks, thus getting rid of the need for end-user Visio installs. A Visio/wiki combination sounds like a good option for this particular idea.
Then I'd love to trade lives with you. That's exactly the religious mindset I was inundated with growing up, and it's what my sister's teaching her kids.
I'm not sure I follow what you're saying. Is your point that it's just as rational to constantly change views of superhuman beings in order to hold on to religious beliefs (I've never seen Satan described as more than a tempter -- there's certainly no indication that God gave him such power of creation to physically affect physics, geology, biology, etc in such a way to make the universe appear much older than 6000 years old) than to accept such evidence as face value? If so, I think we have different views of rationality.
Because there's nothing more that kids love more than history lessons. Seriously, most kids have access to a computer these days. Those with the interest and aptitude will find themselves in the industry or academia, more likely through gaming than through history.
And the rest of the note says that the delta between commercial and LGPL versions is not desired on their part and they want to get the changes into the LGPL version by the next point release. Hopefully in the process they'll better streamline the process so the two versions stay in sync, but nothing seems to suggest that they're trying to deliberately differentiate the two; in fact, the post referenced says just the opposite.
More people are living in urban areas, and urban zones that don't currently warrant a rail system one day will. We may not be retro-fitting current cities, but it doesn't mean that we shouldn't explore new transportation items for developing cities.
Like it or not, the states are not independent. From agriculture to technology, California (really, the whole west coast) and its resources are important to the whole nation. As long as interstate commerce exists, it's in the country's best interest to what it can to safeguard every state and its citizens against natural disaster. Not to mention the fact that the US has federal installations all over (such as military bases), so monitoring programs really are a national concern.
So many libraries exist to help with flaws/lack of functionality in vanilla JS. Perhaps the libraries that come out-of-the-box with Dart get rid of the need for such libraries (though it will probably have its own issues, thus resulting in Dart-specific libraries). And again, the libraries won't suddenly become unusable, as Javascript engines will still exist to utilize them.
The whole point of the "type" attribute in the script tag is that a browser can support multiple scripting languages. The introduction of Dart wouldn't necessitate dropping JS for the browser, but if other browsers implemented it (or Google created extensions for other browsers), it would provide an alternative.
I must have skipped Bible class the day they covered the passages with those events.
PLoS ONE has a high impact factor, and it's gotten there very quickly. In one year it jumped from #25 to #12 in biology journals. And some people publish there because they prefer its business model and want to support openness.
Much of the excitement in football (as in all sports) comes from watching humans with tremendous talent who spend a huge amount of time developing that talent. Like any other sport, strategy is important. But the strategy is partially built around the strengths and weaknesses of the actual humans who make up the team, as well as those of the members of the opposing team. I'm not a huge football fan, but I recognize the difference between multiplying a fairly arbitrary number representing "will" or "skill" by the random roll of a die and a team of people who are fatigued, injured, and withstanding adverse weather conditions, pushing themselves to the utmost limit not only for themselves, but for their team and the millions of people cheering them on towards victory.
When I'm designing a solution, I don't ask if it works, I was if it works well. Is it secure? Is it scalable? What are the risks associated with it? Is it full of kludges that make bad implementations easy? What do I do if a user decides she doesn't trust that functionality and turns it off? And the point of the article wasn't to say that people shouldn't use cookies when developing web site or applications. Rather, it's an examination of how a sub-optimal solution came to be so that perhaps other people can avoid similar pitfalls in the future.
That's not exactly true. While modern printer touchpads have helped out with the situation, push-button systems, generally speaking, aren't as efficient for creating a UI control systems for complex machines. Every time I use one it feels like a kludge, overextending the button interface. On the other hand, a rich widget toolkit (if you have a good UI designer) really can make the overall experience quicker and easier. Not to mention the fact that it would be fairly trivial to set up multiple levels of interfaces exposing on the necessary commands to different classes of users. I consider this more of an evolution of the current printer touch interface than a revolution in printing, but I at least like the concept (can't comment on the implementation since I haven't seen it).
Or perhaps we shouldn't just rely on reciting a litany of facts in hope of winning an argument. Rather, engage in a debate using questions that guide the other person into applying their own logic to the dicussion so that they reach their own reasonably sound conclusion. Don't try to win an argument, let the other person win your argument for you.
I think you're conflating a solitary nature with social ineptitude. It sounds like you do fine in social situations but prefer alone time. When I think of social ineptitude, I picture people who can't recognize social cues, respond appropriately to a social situation, lack of ability to help defuse a potentially volatile situation, etc. This is what can be a problem. Simply liking activities that are more solo or preferring large amounts of alone time aren't in the same category, in my opinion.
My first thought was that this is totally unnecessary and sensationalist use of technology. My second thought was that CNN is going to love this.
1) While it's nice that it has a keyboard dock, it appears that the dock may only support the iPad in portrait mode (they placement of the connector on the long side of the iPad made it seem a bit precarious for putting in a docked mode).
2) Nothing said about mouse support. Seriously, if I'm going to be using it for any type of document creation (and they seem to think people will, as they're providing iWorks in the app store), I don't want to have to use the screen for copy and paste. Lack of mouse support would be a killer for me.
3) Main screen is nothing but icons to get into applications. With more screen real estate there should be support for widgets on the home screen (as I understand it, iPhones and iPod touches don't allow that--one must jailbreak a phone and do it manually).
I'm sure there are more, but those are some things that pop right out at me. As others have said, it really looks like the worst of both worlds. Not as portable as a smartphone, not as good at document creation as a netbook or notebook. eBooks, papers, and mags seem to be the only things to gain from this device.
It depends on how the Exchange server is set up. For industries that demand security, such as healthcare, Exchange servers tend to require that mobile devices support things like encryption and remote wipe. In order for the device to connect, it has to tell the server that it supports any of these capabilities required by the server. Android's default email client doesn't. The Touchdown app does report capabilities back, but it's basically fudging the truth in order to connect (that's my understanding, anyway). Some admins have glommed on to this trick and are refusing to let Android devices connect at all.
So no, Android isn't ready for the enterprise. I have the HTC Eris and love it. I work at a research/teaching hospital, though, and probably wouldn't be able to use it for work. That's fine by me, but anyone who got the phone in order to keep up with work is going to be quite disappointed.
There are many different forms of PKC, including PKC delta, the one that seems to be in question here according to recent publications from this lab. Specifically, a caspase enzyme is cleaving PKC delta into a smaller protein, and it's this cleaved version that appears to be causing the damage to the dopamine neurons in the nigra. Caspases mediate programmed cell death, and the compound in the paper I looked at blocks a certain caspase that was activated by the presence of certain metals.
So while PKC and caspases are found widely throughout the body, there's actually a fair degree of specificity in the current model. Of course it's still early, and there are things to worry about, such as a possible increased likelihood for cancer (caspase 3 may be involved in breast cancer). But if this particular interaction between capase 3 and PKC delta can be successfully blocked without harm to other systems, we may have a good treatment on our hands.
Having not read the article, I figured they discussed Jem's hologram-inducing supercomputer in the AI section.
I think extensions for office suites make quite a bit of sense, actually. If you're deploying in an enterprise, extensions can make it much easier to integrate the suite with current applications and workflow. Say you've got some kind of accounting or auditing system that you want your spreadsheet to interface with. With KOffice you now have a couple of options, scripting or writing an extension. The better solution depends on the particular case, of course, but that kind of customization makes an office suite much more appealing. And there are many niches, such as integrating a word processor with a citation manager, that don't belong at all in the core product.
I'd guess no. I believe it was V.S. Ramachandran who demonstrated that he could fool the brain into getting rid of phantom limb pain by using mirrors so that the visual system interpreted the remaining limb as being the missing limb (which leads into questions about blind people and phantom limbs, for which I don't have the answer and am too lazy to look it up). If one had an appendage that looked like an arm doing the things the brain was commanding the arm to do(and possibly requiring some tactile feedback as well), the brain would probably just interpret that appendage as the missing limb instead of creating a representation as a 3d arm.
Or I could be totally wrong. Wouldn't be the first time.
This is a squarely consumer product from a small company with limited developer resources. According to Net Applications, Windows and Mac make up a bit over 98% of the consumer OS base. While people may disagree over methodology, these are the two major platforms used by Eye-Fi's target demo. Expending resources on Linux support probably doesn't make financial sense for them.
I primarily use Linux, and I love it, but it's not Eye-Fi's responsibility to make Linux more appealing by having applications available for the platform.
btw, how come tech books don't come on tape/cd?
Only on Slashdot do you find someone who wants to listen to Natalie Portman talk SQL.
Joking aside, I doubt I'd find tech books on tape all that useful. Without diagrams, code examples, etc., you lose quite a bit of the value, IMO.
Visio will export to HTML with working hyperlinks, thus getting rid of the need for end-user Visio installs. A Visio/wiki combination sounds like a good option for this particular idea.