They have to have the other stuff to justify the photos of girls and women. A lot of it is "health" stories that are basically body shaming and anxiety inducing crap where they write about the 5 year old children of celebrities wearing designer clothes and eating sweets like any normal 5 year old would.
If the UK gets a deal then presumably it will make the switch too as part of the brexit transition period. If not... Well, they will be too busy trying to save their economy from a massive recession and huge layoffs to care.
It's an economic disadvantage for the UK if it doesn't stop using DST.
Every time that change happens there is a cost. Stuff breaks, time and effort has to be put in to making sure stuff doesn't break, every system has to be set up to allow that cha
I wonder if this is what happened to BA recently, when their IT system was down for days and lots of people couldn't fly. They were doing a migration with support from IBM as I recall.
You run them until their fuel is spent, then you pull one out of service and recycle it. You end up with a few pounds of waste material per unit over the course of it's lifespan, which is a couple of decades.
That is untrue. You end up with tonnes of high level waste that needs to be stored for extended periods of time. The rector case degrades and is the main limit on the lifetime of most designs. It can't be recycled.
This kind of hand-waving "we can just recycle it (with currently non-existent techniques that we hope to develop later, maybe)" is why investors aren't interested.
They are all way too expensive. Anyone can build a really expensive EV, those aren't very interesting.
It's the affordable end of the market that is exciting. Kia and Hyundai both have really strong offerings (Niro and Kona) with 250-300 mile range and a lot of value for money. Nissan may have a decent Leaf out this year, Tesla may one day get to $35k but that's looking expensive for a very basic, stripped down car now...
Kona/Niro are both really impressive. Range, tech (including auto-steering), quality and performance are all there.
An anecdote is not a substitute for data. Systemic disadvantage is well documented. Are you seriously saying that some demographics are not disadvantaged from birth in the US, for example?
You don't seem to understand what she means by "distributed". Given that and the rest being TL;DR I didn't read it, but to explain your mistake she means that all other things being equal any given person would have an equal chance of having X merit. In reality the world isn't like that, because things other than innate ability have an influence.
Well, in any case, having read the manifesto it seems reasonable. It's basically just saying that coding ability isn't everything, e.g. people who burn themselves out might do well on technical merit but are failing at life in general and we should recognize that.
Your link is broken. The correct one is postmeritocracy.org.
This makes me think that you didn't stumble upon it just now, because if you had you would have copy/pasted the correct URL. The one you linked to was posted years ago in a 4chan thread and was endlessly recycled by people pretending to be neutral, concerned newcomers.
You would think this point would be obvious to nerds who are likely to at least be familiar with D&D, and the inevitable gaps in the rules where the DM has to make the best decision they can.
Yeah but that's true of all Jaguars. It's impossible to drive one without looking like a smug git.
They do actually have a working prototype. MKBHD drove it: https://youtu.be/jbXEWi-OK4o
They have to have the other stuff to justify the photos of girls and women. A lot of it is "health" stories that are basically body shaming and anxiety inducing crap where they write about the 5 year old children of celebrities wearing designer clothes and eating sweets like any normal 5 year old would.
UTC was a compromise between the French and British. The French wanted CTU (temps universel coordonné) and the British wanted CUT (coordinated universal time), so they settled on UTC that doesn't stand for anything.
If the UK gets a deal then presumably it will make the switch too as part of the brexit transition period. If not... Well, they will be too busy trying to save their economy from a massive recession and huge layoffs to care.
It's an economic disadvantage for the UK if it doesn't stop using DST.
Every time that change happens there is a cost. Stuff breaks, time and effort has to be put in to making sure stuff doesn't break, every system has to be set up to allow that cha
The Daily Mail is basically
- 5 Minutes Hate
- Everything gives you cancer
- Cute animals
- Any excuse to show a sexy girl, even if she is 14
Just that, relentlessly day after day, until your mind is corrupted.
I wonder if this is what happened to BA recently, when their IT system was down for days and lots of people couldn't fly. They were doing a migration with support from IBM as I recall.
Demonstrably untrue.
http://bsdimp.blogspot.com/201...
For 70 years now we've been trying to find ways solar electric work on a nationwide scale, particularly working on the storage problem.
No, we have been waiting for the cost to fall to where widespread solar and storage solutions make economic sense. We are at that point now.
France's nuclear programme was basically welfare for their energy companies. Also, it produces a lot of CO2.
You run them until their fuel is spent, then you pull one out of service and recycle it. You end up with a few pounds of waste material per unit over the course of it's lifespan, which is a couple of decades.
That is untrue. You end up with tonnes of high level waste that needs to be stored for extended periods of time. The rector case degrades and is the main limit on the lifetime of most designs. It can't be recycled.
This kind of hand-waving "we can just recycle it (with currently non-existent techniques that we hope to develop later, maybe)" is why investors aren't interested.
They are all way too expensive. Anyone can build a really expensive EV, those aren't very interesting.
It's the affordable end of the market that is exciting. Kia and Hyundai both have really strong offerings (Niro and Kona) with 250-300 mile range and a lot of value for money. Nissan may have a decent Leaf out this year, Tesla may one day get to $35k but that's looking expensive for a very basic, stripped down car now...
Kona/Niro are both really impressive. Range, tech (including auto-steering), quality and performance are all there.
Wait, why do you think I'm defending her?
By the way I can see your sock puppets.
Really, the barriers to becoming a skilled software engineer are low? Innate ability is all you need?
An anecdote is not a substitute for data. Systemic disadvantage is well documented. Are you seriously saying that some demographics are not disadvantaged from birth in the US, for example?
You don't seem to understand what she means by "distributed". Given that and the rest being TL;DR I didn't read it, but to explain your mistake she means that all other things being equal any given person would have an equal chance of having X merit. In reality the world isn't like that, because things other than innate ability have an influence.
Well, in any case, having read the manifesto it seems reasonable. It's basically just saying that coding ability isn't everything, e.g. people who burn themselves out might do well on technical merit but are failing at life in general and we should recognize that.
You got it wrong. Completely wrong.
I noticed you complained about people making unfounded, dubious claims of racism based on specious logic before. Something to ponder.
Is this just because you like making attacks on amimojo, or do you really think that the authors of the study are overt racists?
Your link is broken. The correct one is postmeritocracy.org.
This makes me think that you didn't stumble upon it just now, because if you had you would have copy/pasted the correct URL. The one you linked to was posted years ago in a 4chan thread and was endlessly recycled by people pretending to be neutral, concerned newcomers.
Interesting how the FreeBSD CoC didn't end up destroying the project. It's had multiple solid releases since then, community seems as strong as ever.
You would think this point would be obvious to nerds who are likely to at least be familiar with D&D, and the inevitable gaps in the rules where the DM has to make the best decision they can.
What a shit conspiracy theory.
If the SJW Illuminati did get to Linus surely a relatively tame, widely used CoC would be the least of their concerns.
Except Subsurface...
On the other hand we know for certain that Linus' abrasiveness has driven away a few good developers. So that doesn't seem to be any better.