and the rejection is documented when reversed, or at least rejected code has an audit trail. Of course, that won't track those who refuse to contribute because they don't want to be part of the problem.
We can always go back to a place where it was stable, and thankfully, unless GIT is gutted, we can find blame for those who polluted the code-base. I always go pale when annotate shows my name next to a line of code that is broken;)
From 295 to 95. Literally. Now 295 runs back towards Philly a bit but it is combined with 95. I always thought it was part of replacing the Scudders Falls bridge. 95 Disappeared above Trenton right at the river and reappeared down past 195. They literally '"Fixed" the problem' Office space style.
mouthed know it alls who's only response to workplace complaints is "well if you don't like your employer's rules, then start your own company". If it was truly a free market, companies like Facebook and Microsoft would have a hard time staying so large because they wouldn't have access to rent seeking through lobbying local, state, and federal government.
And the only thing that I could walk with two 20" long 3.5" floppy cases worth of floppies from the computer lab at school down to my apartment computer was Slackware. Therefore, for me, at least, it was Linux, then GNU. Yes I use EMACS, and for that I will be forever in your debt, but prior to that, the last time I used UNIX was on my daddy's lap in the 70s on a Bell Telephone central office computer somewhere on the east coast of america, and Dad didn't even know VI...
Buddy, I've been on slashdot since I stumbled upon Chips and Dips looking for hints on how to use gimp. Rob had some cool ideas and I stayed for the tech news. The fact that this site has an obvious political bias makes me sick when I remember it was all about tech and not 15 pages of: "well this is tech because well reasons and global warming" or "you better believe this needs to be talked about because 'tenuous reasons' and Trump said mean things" which somehow peripherally affects tech--it doesn't. At this point, i'd be happy sitting in a global warming induced desert on my russian government controlled non-net neutral, non general purpose, NSA, FSA, and Chinese intelligence backdoored approved propaganda device praising trump's 32nd landslide election and knowing that my starving children are starving to make america great again.
Robots to create other robots and the average person will be able to own farmbots, 3d printers, CNC machines, etc, all with AI that makes working them easy? The only thing that will stop that is for the rich to kill all of the hackers capable of making that happen and then keeping it all for themselves, which we know won't happen. All of the sudden, you will be able to create your own soil and feed yourself without any knowledge of farming, husbandry, botany, or chemistry. You will be able to select from thousands of cheap devices that can be 3d printed. You will be able to make robust items that can't be 3d printed without 20 years experience in automated manufacturing. Look, I can go into the 7-11 and buy a handheld smart phone for 20 bucks that will give me cloud access, access to videos to teach me how to use it, and access to a world class education--if you know where to look (http://hackereducation.wordpress.com has hints)--and make my own programs. For 20 bucks, off the shelf, I have a machine that is probably as powerful as 1980s supercomputers that costed 10 orders of magnitude more. You pull the golden asteroid into orbit and now, all of the sudden, metal prices are so cheap you can't afford to mine them. Plastic type items can already be made from plant materials, so oil doesn't matter. All that matters is access to energy. All of this without socialist intervention policies. The smartphone is 20 bucks because of the free market. Its almost free because of the free market. Not because of socialism. Robots and AI will follow, and with a diversity of AI, you will be able to counterbalance sky net.
What about Soyuz, gemini, skylab, or Apollo? Most of that technology should have gone out of patent if there was any. I know Lockheed has a lock on Orion for the moment, but that shouldn't mean we can't try. I just want the basics--enough for people willing to take the risk to go out and try to mine asteroids. I think if we can get that then things will snowball like they did with the USA.
I've been working on putting structure to MIT's OCW courses and filling in the blanks where there's missing courses. If we all tried to just go through what is available out there now and focussed on propulsion, life support systems, systems engineering, etc, I think we could get ourselves off the planet and mining asteroids to build craft that could get to this system without having our work belong to any organizations that could keep it to themselves. I know that's quite collectivist for a capitalist, but I believe that math/basic science shouldn't be patentable, and the only way to do this is to race against those who intend to patent everything. I put my thoughts up on Hive13's wiki and moved them to http://hackereducation.wordpre... I am not a professor and I only had 2 years as a college software system architect, so my understanding of curriculum development may need help, but it doesn't matter if the idea grows into something better. We have a way to use sunlight to fuse glass https://www.youtube.com/watch?... and probably could use these: http://www.growbiointensive.or... guys' ideas to grow food. No idea since I'm a physics/cs guy and not a biologist or doctor. I just wish we'd stop waiting for the government to do everything for us and use the damned hand rectangles that contain all of human knowledge to learn ourselves and then go do it!
Is feeling the pain of having to save and load data for my TI99/4A and tandy PC4 pocket computer on cassette. I imagine it will be a lot like toggling in bootstrap code to an Altair 8800: do it a couple times and you're gonna throw a rom in there....
a contingency plan for this. I wouldn't be surprised if Tim himself isn't touring foundries in the USA and other countries that will fall outside of Trump's embargo.
Simple. The media picks the easiest to beat Republican and the democrats force on us the biggest shit sandwich that they can because they owe him/her favors.
What are you talking about? Of course they are worth the money. You take a department with 10 employees processing ar/ap and have 5 software engineers automate it. The salary is well worth the replacement of those 10 person departments at hundreds of businesses with software programs and teams of implementation engineers that bill 250/hr for about 8 months until either they get some fragile solution up and running or get replaced by another team of implementation engineers who bill 250/hr to implement the software that their 5 software engineers wrote.....
With a mark up to 20 bucks an hour to their American customers. Or work for 60,000 as a Software Dev filling a Principle Dev role with commensurate experience.
and the rejection is documented when reversed, or at least rejected code has an audit trail. Of course, that won't track those who refuse to contribute because they don't want to be part of the problem.
We can always go back to a place where it was stable, and thankfully, unless GIT is gutted, we can find blame for those who polluted the code-base. I always go pale when annotate shows my name next to a line of code that is broken ;)
Well, in theory, at least, you can use ZFC to prove it, however, if I remember correctly some of the underlying arguments are tautologies.
The 295/95 Scudders Falls bridge is one of the few places you can leave NJ without paying for the privilege to do so. I won't mention the other ones ;)
From 295 to 95. Literally. Now 295 runs back towards Philly a bit but it is combined with 95. I always thought it was part of replacing the Scudders Falls bridge. 95 Disappeared above Trenton right at the river and reappeared down past 195. They literally '"Fixed" the problem' Office space style.
mouthed know it alls who's only response to workplace complaints is "well if you don't like your employer's rules, then start your own company". If it was truly a free market, companies like Facebook and Microsoft would have a hard time staying so large because they wouldn't have access to rent seeking through lobbying local, state, and federal government.
buy a faraday cage bag and check your phone every 15 minutes or so.
And the only thing that I could walk with two 20" long 3.5" floppy cases worth of floppies from the computer lab at school down to my apartment computer was Slackware. Therefore, for me, at least, it was Linux, then GNU. Yes I use EMACS, and for that I will be forever in your debt, but prior to that, the last time I used UNIX was on my daddy's lap in the 70s on a Bell Telephone central office computer somewhere on the east coast of america, and Dad didn't even know VI...
How it used to be: http://web.archive.org/web/199... Not much political articles there.
https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/n...
Buddy, I've been on slashdot since I stumbled upon Chips and Dips looking for hints on how to use gimp. Rob had some cool ideas and I stayed for the tech news. The fact that this site has an obvious political bias makes me sick when I remember it was all about tech and not 15 pages of: "well this is tech because well reasons and global warming" or "you better believe this needs to be talked about because 'tenuous reasons' and Trump said mean things" which somehow peripherally affects tech--it doesn't. At this point, i'd be happy sitting in a global warming induced desert on my russian government controlled non-net neutral, non general purpose, NSA, FSA, and Chinese intelligence backdoored approved propaganda device praising trump's 32nd landslide election and knowing that my starving children are starving to make america great again.
here's some sponsors in the area that provide fast food...
Robots to create other robots and the average person will be able to own farmbots, 3d printers, CNC machines, etc, all with AI that makes working them easy? The only thing that will stop that is for the rich to kill all of the hackers capable of making that happen and then keeping it all for themselves, which we know won't happen. All of the sudden, you will be able to create your own soil and feed yourself without any knowledge of farming, husbandry, botany, or chemistry. You will be able to select from thousands of cheap devices that can be 3d printed. You will be able to make robust items that can't be 3d printed without 20 years experience in automated manufacturing. Look, I can go into the 7-11 and buy a handheld smart phone for 20 bucks that will give me cloud access, access to videos to teach me how to use it, and access to a world class education--if you know where to look (http://hackereducation.wordpress.com has hints)--and make my own programs. For 20 bucks, off the shelf, I have a machine that is probably as powerful as 1980s supercomputers that costed 10 orders of magnitude more. You pull the golden asteroid into orbit and now, all of the sudden, metal prices are so cheap you can't afford to mine them. Plastic type items can already be made from plant materials, so oil doesn't matter. All that matters is access to energy. All of this without socialist intervention policies. The smartphone is 20 bucks because of the free market. Its almost free because of the free market. Not because of socialism. Robots and AI will follow, and with a diversity of AI, you will be able to counterbalance sky net.
What about Soyuz, gemini, skylab, or Apollo? Most of that technology should have gone out of patent if there was any. I know Lockheed has a lock on Orion for the moment, but that shouldn't mean we can't try. I just want the basics--enough for people willing to take the risk to go out and try to mine asteroids. I think if we can get that then things will snowball like they did with the USA.
I've been working on putting structure to MIT's OCW courses and filling in the blanks where there's missing courses. If we all tried to just go through what is available out there now and focussed on propulsion, life support systems, systems engineering, etc, I think we could get ourselves off the planet and mining asteroids to build craft that could get to this system without having our work belong to any organizations that could keep it to themselves. I know that's quite collectivist for a capitalist, but I believe that math/basic science shouldn't be patentable, and the only way to do this is to race against those who intend to patent everything. I put my thoughts up on Hive13's wiki and moved them to http://hackereducation.wordpre... I am not a professor and I only had 2 years as a college software system architect, so my understanding of curriculum development may need help, but it doesn't matter if the idea grows into something better. We have a way to use sunlight to fuse glass https://www.youtube.com/watch?... and probably could use these: http://www.growbiointensive.or... guys' ideas to grow food. No idea since I'm a physics/cs guy and not a biologist or doctor. I just wish we'd stop waiting for the government to do everything for us and use the damned hand rectangles that contain all of human knowledge to learn ourselves and then go do it!
Complex analysis and google isn't being very helpful.
More News for Nerds, stuff that matters...
Is feeling the pain of having to save and load data for my TI99/4A and tandy PC4 pocket computer on cassette. I imagine it will be a lot like toggling in bootstrap code to an Altair 8800: do it a couple times and you're gonna throw a rom in there....
Read at least the first volume, even if you have to check it out of a library.
a contingency plan for this. I wouldn't be surprised if Tim himself isn't touring foundries in the USA and other countries that will fall outside of Trump's embargo.
From the curriculum. You reap what you sow.
Simple. The media picks the easiest to beat Republican and the democrats force on us the biggest shit sandwich that they can because they owe him/her favors.
of things that will get me on yet another list.....
What are you talking about? Of course they are worth the money. You take a department with 10 employees processing ar/ap and have 5 software engineers automate it. The salary is well worth the replacement of those 10 person departments at hundreds of businesses with software programs and teams of implementation engineers that bill 250/hr for about 8 months until either they get some fragile solution up and running or get replaced by another team of implementation engineers who bill 250/hr to implement the software that their 5 software engineers wrote.....
With a mark up to 20 bucks an hour to their American customers. Or work for 60,000 as a Software Dev filling a Principle Dev role with commensurate experience.