" capitalistic business owners that moved all of the manufacturing jobs overseas to make more profits"...
Which had something to do with high taxes, unions pushing out poor products while protecting *some* workers who didn't cut it, and over-regulation in the US.
I went to one of these Top 10 CS program schools (for a graduate degree) and you can tell a lot (probably even the university) by the fact that the CS Department was in the Applied Physics and Math building. It has a lot of math and theory. There are a ton of theory classes. Plus there are SOMEWHAT more practical class in OS's, AI, natural language processing, neural networks, interface design/human factors depending on your interests. All have a huge component of the theory though so that you aren't just learning about Unix/Linux from an OS perspective, but you are learning the theory and rational behind various designs. e.g. you might learn about the Mach kernel versus the BSD kernel but with much focus on why certain design decisions are made and how that impacts performance and the like.
For example, you'll learn about CPU design and trade-offs there. You'd learn about Flynn's taxonomy and various examples of them, but you wouldn't just learn a particular implementation of a MIMD machine with nothing else.
Now we did not have a specific class in security, but it was a huge concern in the OS classes regarding processes, stack etc, and in the hardware classes for CPU memory protection and the like. Ditto compiler classes where you would have the compiler (or tools tied into it) to do verification or bounds checking etc. Even the the Theory of Computation classes it was touched upon in the NP/P discussions (Thanks Christos Papadimitriou). We discussed viruses, worms (the Morris worm impacted everyone Nov of 1988) and other malware (and this was 1988 and 1989) and best practices in terms of hardening the OS and applications so that they weren't (hopefully) vulnerable. Certainly a lower level than at the browser level, but the security discussions were wrapped into the appropriate classes so that you were made aware of the issues when appropriate.
Would a high level overview be appropriate now? Perhaps. I am not convinced though that it should be pulled out of the individual classes since I don't see that there is one "theory of security" that applies to all areas universally and it might be better discussed where it is appropriate. Maybe it would be useful, I'm just not convinced yet.
The point being that you are learning the foundations and not having it like a trade school where they get you a Microsoft certification - and there is NOTHING wrong with that, btw, it is just a different focus of what a particular program would be. Sure you can code and you know doubt know a lot about Unix (or derivatives) since you are using them, but the focus isn't on a set of skills for a particular OS or CPU. You are learning so that you can go to Microsoft, Apple or wherever and help them decide on the best way to implement something to accomplish a particular set of goals.:-)
Hal Finney -an ALS sufferer- did the ultimate Ice Bucket challenge with liquid nitrogen last week (Aug 28, 2014) when he was cryopreserved after passing away from ALS:
You are right, the whole "notability" standard at Wikipedia has been f'd up for years. Someone notable today, may be much less notable than someone from 100 years ago, but the person from a century ago might not be as notable to people today. Instead of trying to build a repository of accurate knowledge and information, Wikipedia is more concerned about building up fiefdoms of power for the editors and managers, which is too bad.
They just need to register ONE of them to reestablish contact. They might even be able to use "domain tasting" to register a bunch and then cancel within 5 days.
"astronauts used in trips to the moon in the 1960s."
Just one point about the summary, not just the 1960s, there were more trips to the moon using Apollo in the 1970s than in the 1960s: 1960s Apollo moon trips: 8, 10, 11, 12 (2 landings 11, 12, and 2 circumnavigations)
1970s: 13, 14, 15, 16,17 (4 landings, not Apollo 13 obviously)
(There were other Apollo missions that were not moon trips, 7, 9 for example that were in earth orbit, Apollo-Soyuz etc).
It has been going on a lot longer than Nixon. Look at FDR and the court-packing scandal for example. Look at the Commerce Clause cases which eliminated the concept of "enumerated powers."
And if he is really concerned about the "free market" not doing enough, there is always the option of starting a competing service that is more "free market" and responsive. Yes, that costs something, but that is the nature of the "free market" - it isn't free to everyone, someone's time costs something, always.
A decade ago? Can you share your time machine? ASICs arrived for mining early 2013.
" capitalistic business owners that moved all of the manufacturing jobs overseas to make more profits" ...
Which had something to do with high taxes, unions pushing out poor products while protecting *some* workers who didn't cut it, and over-regulation in the US.
Excellent summary of my thoughts Akamai's actions.
He should consider using a .bit address with Zeronet.
I went to one of these Top 10 CS program schools (for a graduate degree) and you can tell a lot (probably even the university) by the fact that the CS Department was in the Applied Physics and Math building. It has a lot of math and theory. There are a ton of theory classes. Plus there are SOMEWHAT more practical class in OS's, AI, natural language processing, neural networks, interface design/human factors depending on your interests. All have a huge component of the theory though so that you aren't just learning about Unix/Linux from an OS perspective, but you are learning the theory and rational behind various designs. e.g. you might learn about the Mach kernel versus the BSD kernel but with much focus on why certain design decisions are made and how that impacts performance and the like.
For example, you'll learn about CPU design and trade-offs there. You'd learn about Flynn's taxonomy and various examples of them, but you wouldn't just learn a particular implementation of a MIMD machine with nothing else.
Now we did not have a specific class in security, but it was a huge concern in the OS classes regarding processes, stack etc, and in the hardware classes for CPU memory protection and the like. Ditto compiler classes where you would have the compiler (or tools tied into it) to do verification or bounds checking etc. Even the the Theory of Computation classes it was touched upon in the NP/P discussions (Thanks Christos Papadimitriou). We discussed viruses, worms (the Morris worm impacted everyone Nov of 1988) and other malware (and this was 1988 and 1989) and best practices in terms of hardening the OS and applications so that they weren't (hopefully) vulnerable. Certainly a lower level than at the browser level, but the security discussions were wrapped into the appropriate classes so that you were made aware of the issues when appropriate.
Would a high level overview be appropriate now? Perhaps. I am not convinced though that it should be pulled out of the individual classes since I don't see that there is one "theory of security" that applies to all areas universally and it might be better discussed where it is appropriate. Maybe it would be useful, I'm just not convinced yet.
The point being that you are learning the foundations and not having it like a trade school where they get you a Microsoft certification - and there is NOTHING wrong with that, btw, it is just a different focus of what a particular program would be. Sure you can code and you know doubt know a lot about Unix (or derivatives) since you are using them, but the focus isn't on a set of skills for a particular OS or CPU. You are learning so that you can go to Microsoft, Apple or wherever and help them decide on the best way to implement something to accomplish a particular set of goals. :-)
Just don't (a) answer accurate about "race" or (b) don't ask about it.
Skin color is irrelevant. The overt racists who keep asking and caring about skin color should be shunned.
What is the cutoff for a "race"? With 23andme, AncestryDNA etc, it will show a lot of people who have traces of every race.
And you forgot the most important one word: ZUNE
Well, this shooting is likely murder, and I AM "sure" I would NOT "shoot him in the back as he ran away".
So you pay more than you are legally obligated to pay? That is great of you. How much extra do you pay?
Or to put it even less genious-ly (unless it is "evil genius-ly"): "When everyone's super, no one is"...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
.info has been around since 2001. Is that really new fangled? (Or is this just a Slashdot dupe from 2001 lol).
Hal Finney -an ALS sufferer- did the ultimate Ice Bucket challenge with liquid nitrogen last week (Aug 28, 2014) when he was cryopreserved after passing away from ALS:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...
You are right, the whole "notability" standard at Wikipedia has been f'd up for years. Someone notable today, may be much less notable than someone from 100 years ago, but the person from a century ago might not be as notable to people today. Instead of trying to build a repository of accurate knowledge and information, Wikipedia is more concerned about building up fiefdoms of power for the editors and managers, which is too bad.
Kind of like all the systems, procedures, and protections that prevent this type of thing at the NSA.
And the population of New York State is....19,651,127 (2013 est).
Anyone who wants to have even more centralized data storage of personal, private information just doesn't care about data security.
They just need to register ONE of them to reestablish contact. They might even be able to use "domain tasting" to register a bunch and then cancel within 5 days.
"astronauts used in trips to the moon in the 1960s."
Just one point about the summary, not just the 1960s, there were more trips to the moon using Apollo in the 1970s than in the 1960s:
1960s Apollo moon trips: 8, 10, 11, 12 (2 landings 11, 12, and 2 circumnavigations)
1970s: 13, 14, 15, 16,17 (4 landings, not Apollo 13 obviously)
(There were other Apollo missions that were not moon trips, 7, 9 for example that were in earth orbit, Apollo-Soyuz etc).
It has been going on a lot longer than Nixon. Look at FDR and the court-packing scandal for example. Look at the Commerce Clause cases which eliminated the concept of "enumerated powers."
You are right, kind of like Critter 592 (ValuJet). Went into the Everglades in Florida like a lawn dart.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V...
Ask the USA too. "Long term stability" and "dollar" do not go together for many decades now.
He was storing them at Gox?
OR they did use it in this case, realized it wasn't a "real" threat and so did not pass along the information to the local police.
We've been hearing this on Slashdot for 3.5 years now and during the time bitcoin has gone from well below dollar parity, to here.
This sounds like a copy and paste from 2011 on Slashdot.org. It is a good thing that people listened and didn't buy in at $1 or $3 or $0.10. ;-)
Don't forget to add things like LISP, snobol, prolog, Pascal, Modula-2, SML, APL etc. :-)
And if he is really concerned about the "free market" not doing enough, there is always the option of starting a competing service that is more "free market" and responsive. Yes, that costs something, but that is the nature of the "free market" - it isn't free to everyone, someone's time costs something, always.