I'm not even going to blame her for this issue. She's not an IT person. That's not her job. I'm going to blame all the IT people that worked with her that never said anything, or raised any kind of fuss over the problem.
> Now of course what you eat still matters a lot, but mainly because it affects your psychology differently
And that's exactly the point. Carbs tend to cause blood sugar spikes, and the body then overproduces insulin, causing a sugar/carb crash, and thus demotivating people from physical activity, but those carbs still end up being converted to fat.
...is such shit advice because it assumes all calories are equal when more and more evidence is coming out that they're not, especially calories from carbohydrates.
No, the Turing test is shit. Any AI that passes it would actually be far smarter than us humans since it would have to take into account the experience of all the things that itself wouldn't actually have to deal with--such as eating, pissing, and shitting. Why should an AI have to think about all the things us meatbags have to think about that aren't relevant to it? AIs don't have parents (well, not in the traditional sense anyway) and so won't have a human-like childhood experience to reflect upon, nor should they have to worry about whether that lump is cancerous, or whether they have to go into work tomorrow, or if that dish had too much salt in it.
Maybe it's just me, but Agile and waterfall development seem like orthogonal concepts that don't exclude one or the other. Waterfall probably needs to be tweaked a bit to work for a team using Agile, but other than that, I don't see any reason why it still couldn't be used as model for project management even if Agile is used.
Records go back to 1880. Experts say there's a good chance global heat records will keep falling, especially next year because an El Nino weather event is brewing on top of man-made global warming.
Sorry, but I just can't see the feasibility of flying cars unless they're entirely autonomous. Getting a pilot's license is difficult for good reason, and is also part of why flying is so safe. I can't see how well it would work to teach everyone how to fly given that.
To a certain extent, you're right, but open source lives and breaths on its reputation, and I'm fairly certain that the coders behind OpenSSL are employed somewhere in their capacity to actually write code. I'm not certain that they're necessarily employed to write OpenSSL code, but it wouldn't surprise me. On top of that, many employers of open source developers often offer paid support for what their employees are coding up.
And so to the extent of their reputation, and any paid support provided, they will be held to account.
Just because something sounds like propaganda doesn't mean it's not true. That doesn't even begin to cover how many scientists actually believe that the IPCC reports are too conservative in their predictions.
Yeah, but bubbles are messy, but they are fun, but it's so hard to get them in order with them floating around, and people popping them. That's the worst. Just once I have them all in order, someone goes and pops one of them. I could never figure out where to put the bubbles that have another bubble inside them.
This isn't as true as it used to be. Direct3d 9 has been implemented with Gallium3d, and the Wine developers, as I understand it, plan on taking advantage of that.
This brings up an interesting thought. Since the total number of Bitcoins is fixed, and if these coins seem to now be irrecoverable, what happens to the currency when it disappears into encrypted black holes like this?
The difference is that we don't know what these particular particles will do to our bodies yet, and this was something rather unanticipated with 3d printers. Ultimately more research needs to be done, and it may well turn out that these particles are harmless, but considering that we don't know much about their interactions with our biology, it's best to assume the worst until we know better.
With cooking, candles, etc., we've been doing it for so long that we can probably safely assume that the resulting particles aren't causing any significant harm.
I'm not even going to blame her for this issue. She's not an IT person. That's not her job. I'm going to blame all the IT people that worked with her that never said anything, or raised any kind of fuss over the problem.
I think they meant non-undisclosed, which is a perfectly cromulent word. Irregardless, we should all be carefuller with grammar.
> Now of course what you eat still matters a lot, but mainly because it affects your psychology differently
And that's exactly the point. Carbs tend to cause blood sugar spikes, and the body then overproduces insulin, causing a sugar/carb crash, and thus demotivating people from physical activity, but those carbs still end up being converted to fat.
...is such shit advice because it assumes all calories are equal when more and more evidence is coming out that they're not, especially calories from carbohydrates.
No, the Turing test is shit. Any AI that passes it would actually be far smarter than us humans since it would have to take into account the experience of all the things that itself wouldn't actually have to deal with--such as eating, pissing, and shitting. Why should an AI have to think about all the things us meatbags have to think about that aren't relevant to it? AIs don't have parents (well, not in the traditional sense anyway) and so won't have a human-like childhood experience to reflect upon, nor should they have to worry about whether that lump is cancerous, or whether they have to go into work tomorrow, or if that dish had too much salt in it.
Maybe it's just me, but Agile and waterfall development seem like orthogonal concepts that don't exclude one or the other. Waterfall probably needs to be tweaked a bit to work for a team using Agile, but other than that, I don't see any reason why it still couldn't be used as model for project management even if Agile is used.
I'm pretty sure this is all just full of hot air.
It's the redistribution of that mass that is the problem. It wasn't about the mass disappearing. That's a strawman that wasn't even being brought up.
Who would want to pirate U2's music anyway? ...
Ah, okay, I see the ingenuity in that tech.
Another possibility is that the winner is lying about losing. I know personally that I wouldn't want to be known for winning that auction.
Records go back to 1880. Experts say there's a good chance global heat records will keep falling, especially next year because an El Nino weather event is brewing on top of man-made global warming.
That's not a confusing sentence at all...
Sorry, but I just can't see the feasibility of flying cars unless they're entirely autonomous. Getting a pilot's license is difficult for good reason, and is also part of why flying is so safe. I can't see how well it would work to teach everyone how to fly given that.
I don't understand why Sidhpurwala didn't have a back up contact in another time zone that could have been contacted when he was asleep.
Sure, but I'm willing to bet there are some people that have paid for OpenSSL support, and I'm willing to bet they will get compensation for this.
But still no lawsuit. Then again, this is what happens with proprietary software too.
To a certain extent, you're right, but open source lives and breaths on its reputation, and I'm fairly certain that the coders behind OpenSSL are employed somewhere in their capacity to actually write code. I'm not certain that they're necessarily employed to write OpenSSL code, but it wouldn't surprise me. On top of that, many employers of open source developers often offer paid support for what their employees are coding up.
And so to the extent of their reputation, and any paid support provided, they will be held to account.
Did he mention anywhere that he's apologized for what he did?
Did he mention anywhere that he's changed his position?
Did mention anywhere that he would try to make up for what he did in the past?
I'm pretty sure he didn't do any of that. Sure, he said that Mozilla would continue to be inclusive, but he said nothing about his own views.
Just because something sounds like propaganda doesn't mean it's not true. That doesn't even begin to cover how many scientists actually believe that the IPCC reports are too conservative in their predictions.
Yeah, but bubbles are messy, but they are fun, but it's so hard to get them in order with them floating around, and people popping them. That's the worst. Just once I have them all in order, someone goes and pops one of them. I could never figure out where to put the bubbles that have another bubble inside them.
With Wine, they must be translated to OpenGL...
This isn't as true as it used to be. Direct3d 9 has been implemented with Gallium3d, and the Wine developers, as I understand it, plan on taking advantage of that.
A quick google...
I see what you did there.
In my experience, Outlook Web Access has always worked better in Firefox than it has in IE.
That seems obvious, but what are users going to do if all of it disappears behind these encrypted black holes?
This brings up an interesting thought. Since the total number of Bitcoins is fixed, and if these coins seem to now be irrecoverable, what happens to the currency when it disappears into encrypted black holes like this?
Same with Deja Dup, which comes installed on Ubuntu. It actually works rather beautifully.
The difference is that we don't know what these particular particles will do to our bodies yet, and this was something rather unanticipated with 3d printers. Ultimately more research needs to be done, and it may well turn out that these particles are harmless, but considering that we don't know much about their interactions with our biology, it's best to assume the worst until we know better.
With cooking, candles, etc., we've been doing it for so long that we can probably safely assume that the resulting particles aren't causing any significant harm.