Great, we cast away AD/BC system and KEEP the year numbering as that is an accumulative figure based on the passing of the seasons, etc... so unless Christianity was kind enough to provide us with our seasons back in the day, I think a year would still remain a year in this unholy atheistic world.
Now why would Christians stand in the way of science almost 1 for 1? That is truly worthy of debate.
Since when does google actually validate your data? I can create a fake account off a proxy, and then what?
It's all of YOUR fault for providing google with all your personal information, google just gave you the means. Look at the hacker stories in the news, it's always people with REAL online accounts that they use their REAL accounts to commit crimes with. If your outside a house with a can of gasoline and a match and the house is burning down, is it the houses fault?
This kind of thinking has been around since the70s
on
The Real Job Threat
·
· Score: 1
And yet everybody's still employed (minus social security, unemployment, and shady dealings). The thing with robots is... it requires people to design them, build them, and then maintain them, to replace a single job with superior efficiency. So that's 2 teams and a full time maintenance tech. The only people threatened by this would be the people working ground level at the factory. I think Dell or HP once tried an automated self help telephone system for almost a year before they got rid of it cause it wasn't adding value and pissing people off. Same with microsoft help, they've put decades of work into that little window and I still don't find it useful.
The publisher vastly underestimates the value of communication in the human society. It's more valuable than robots to start... if you can't communicate, you can't build the robot, nobody was born with a super robot building gift as far as I know. They go to school (teachers SCHOCK not robots) and interact with peers gain an interest and then build robots.
Now if they put a robot in say a good times and fire Pedro from Mexico - the green card, who's making $6 an hour and doesn't share the good times passion for making burgers that don't look like shit, now I'd call that progress any day.
Ask Good Times why they won't do it though, the ROI probably isn't even ballpark justifiable for them to consider it. Thus the completely false and absurd nature of this article.
More or less, remember they are subject to military law though, the problem there is if your a sergeant in another country and one of your men gets in a fight, somebody you've fought with, would you snitch them out? Doubtful, the US military has a pretty effective code of silence in regards, just think back to the torture stories and the military cover up.
Because a soldier's primary function is to kill his/her enemy and most countries find that illegal, so all we are saying is if you want a fighting force left, we need to allow them to shoot anyone on site. Sounds harsh, but picture yourself in the boots of a soldier if you can.
Know of the FCC, that's what happens when government controls things like censorship, now picture copyright. I always think back to that family guy episode:P
Copyright needs to go into the hands of.... SHOCK... the artist, not the gov., not the RIAA, not the MPAA. They are the ones doing the work and they should have a say in it, if they can't control the piracy looks like they'll just have to tour more or not be complete douschebags so people will buy their music... aka the way it should be and we might actually get some decent rock going for the first time in 2 decades.
Your assuming any question would be identical or have a similar answer, I would add your logic on top of mine though to get that extra 1% that it may or may not catch. Your assumption is quite great though, I wouldn't apply it in a real world scenario.
The question might also be personal or even abstract, ex. "what color are your eyes", there's just too many variables to factor in, you need a concrete base (in my case psychology), and then expand on it to improve your project over others.
I am assuming too that the person will answer in a manner which indicates a lie based on what we know of liars psychologically, there may be better approaches yet, but I don't think it's possible to nail 100%, closest algorithm wins.
If he started his own moving company and didn't post his revenue to the IRS, then the federal government already cares, ask anybody in prison for tax evasion.
I can see your point though, just that the law is a little ridiculous to enforce.
I think part of the challenge is thinking outside the box towards stuff like this link.
I'd start by writing a dictionary table of lying words and query off that and I'd also try and research other things in the realm of psychology that indicate when somebody is lying in their phrasing or not.
If you think the only part to coding is the code itself, then at least you know where you now stand.
That's an easy one, the state would take this over and probably do a 10x better job at it, I seriously don't trust the weather service anymore. I get that it can be hard to predict the weather, but seriously? Their margin is almost at the global level where its just like don't bother. The local station is typically dead on though to the county level.
But ya, it wouldn't be a private entity that took this over, but each state would devot what they feel is needed (Cali would be at the top of this list).
Lol, think about it, you don't have a job, and you can't afford internet, but nobody's too far away from a library typically to justify gas vs internet cost. The gas is always cheaper. I know of most of the OP while researching jobs at a library when i was younger lol, it's also a great environment for honing in on your job search.
"Artistic" Apple users tend to populate Starbucks wifi channels, I acknowledge that the difference may be 25x, but it should be much greater imo, more ppl need to flock to the library, less to the starbucks.
I'm just curious, how exactly would they prove this? If I pay $20 to somebody for helping me move my furniture, wtf would Louisiana do? Break into my house (rule break 1), and charge me for paying cash to someone... with what? What if I am not obligated to pay my friend (which I'm not), but it still becomes a paid service, get my point?
Way to try and become a police state, thankfully it's just a state rather than federal. A federal law like this would spiral the world economy out of control and probably dethrone our government? This discussion would be better if we imagined this as a federal law, Louisiana doesn't matter in the least bit on a federal scale. Also, how did the people there pass this? Are they fuckin serious?
What exactly makes the design open source? Are they talking about open sourcing the drivers? Cause as with the omega project, there's just a long line of developers lining around the corner to do assembly level programming to reinvent the wheel to make it smaller (sarcasm to the max, nobody wants to work on this shit).
Also seems they have a profit model going here, open source here means, we'll take all your code and then close the source once we have enough and are making enough $.
I can post all day on any of these posts, but I'll chose to start with... YOU!
Virtualization is not be utilized heavily because... it lags like a stuck boar. On a crappy "test" box vitalization will run 101%, it will only be about 10% usable. RAM has as much to do with this as something buried deeper in comp. spec. such as FSB and registered vs unregistered memory. of course. Servers just run bigger badder gear even on the low end. A low end server is like 10x a low end desktop. So don't talk budget pc + virtualization, it's just not usable. It's usable for test case scenarios that don't involve using the VM heavily or doing any work in it, even esxi server lags, the web server version is just vicious.
That's not to say don't have VM enabled technology available, install vmware web server or w/e and use it ONLY when you need it, do all your dev / test work off the base install of w/e you put on it.
Where your post is kind of lacking is what kind of testing are you looking to do? Circuits? electronics? appliance / device programming?.NET? You know? this list can be as long as this discussion thread easily.
Your environment setup depends on that. Get the minimum of what you need to upgrade and then expand. I have a desktop and a laptop as well as a dusty compaq I don't use, the desktop is for gaming, no AV even for performance, the laptop is hardened and is for work, the compaq if I ever get off my ass can be a linux router, a crappy vm server, a media PC, a linux box (I miss these sometimes), or anything of that nature. I got mine for free from work, but you can get something comparable off ebay (don't go to a pawn shop for hardware please).
The biggest thing I found a challenge with is not the equipment, but the space in which you set your gear up, you want stuff to be easily accessible for reconfigurations and all your tools around you so you don't have to say walk down to the basement to grab the network tester.
hope that helps, I'm not bashing virtualization here (every server at work is virtualized on esx4.0 w vcenter management and those fags haven't even figured out how to fully utilize the awesome flex of this), but it's not the one size fits all solution slashdotters are portraying it to be.
This would qualify as a +1 troll post for the comments its brought out from people. But seriously, that may vary by city, but at least the libraries I know of are close to schools and students go there to study, especially when the home environment doesn't provide the proper resources. As to their future as brick and mortar book givers, lucky they picked up on computers and wifi when they did, I see more wifi users there than readers. The movie and music selections greatly vary, but that's a + too.
This works as long as Florida gets more money federally. If the state finances out of its own pocket... the money comes from the state's population. This is already somewhat evident, a house in Montana is 10x cheaper than a house in New York, but that's because land is a commodity in one place and not so much the other. Florida can't do anything about being on the coast, so it would be more expensive to live in Florida than Carolina, so Florida would lose population leading to less money and so forth so forth, until we have New Orleans all over again w/ 1/4 the population.
As long as the appropriate funding models are followed the states can handle themselves, then again we can also talk about federal vs state tax balances to bypass the government completely in terms of funding. In that case Florida's state tax would be higher than Carolina's while both get equal funding from the government, and what has to happen is the federal tax is set to a significantly lower level (the lowest state level) and state tax is adjusted appropriately.
It would definitely be different with Ron Paul, I am not qualified to say that is what we do or do not need though, I can say some of our systems are broken and need more than fixing to right the boat again, shame the government doesn't ship with a reset switch.
Ron Paul is about less government, so he is realigning money from the government to... I'm not sure, health care?
He is assuming the slack will be picked up by corporate America and independent agencies, or perhaps he wants to offer research grants later?
Either way, not enough information in the article to make an educated opinion on his stance besides it makes him sound like a moron, but it may not be as straight forward as that when you factor in everything. I'd also be interested in seeing department benchmarks to see if these departments are performing as they should, ex. for the longest time NASA was not.
I read a great article somewhere on how more and more people are starting to do their own thing, aka entrepreneurship. Corporate jobs suck, if you like working at corporate, I want nothing to do with you. It's all about the $ in short for someone else. With the recession, employers begin to add responsibilities to existing employees as they make cuts to stay in sync with the economy while maintaining their profit margin. Skills are required to be a entrepreneur, you have to be good at something, a trade, craft, or skill that you can make money with, and typically the people who do this have those or at least a lot of experience in their field.
What sucks is a college degree is so beneficial here but it isn't a requirement, but the difference is like... building a house with a skilled builder who's been at it 20 years, or building a house by yourself. You can figure it out eventually and make some flaws that you work through, but building w/ the builder will always be the quicker more safe, more productive route. College is the builder and your the student, typically. Not everybody can code w/o learning it in school first, and not everybody can be a quality entrepreneur without having knowledge of what they're doing.
If college becomes unaffordable though, people will still become entrepreneurs, just the quality of work will decrease as a lot of people who run their own business right now, do in fact have field experience and typically a degree.
Great, we cast away AD/BC system and KEEP the year numbering as that is an accumulative figure based on the passing of the seasons, etc... so unless Christianity was kind enough to provide us with our seasons back in the day, I think a year would still remain a year in this unholy atheistic world.
Now why would Christians stand in the way of science almost 1 for 1? That is truly worthy of debate.
Since when does google actually validate your data? I can create a fake account off a proxy, and then what?
It's all of YOUR fault for providing google with all your personal information, google just gave you the means. Look at the hacker stories in the news, it's always people with REAL online accounts that they use their REAL accounts to commit crimes with. If your outside a house with a can of gasoline and a match and the house is burning down, is it the houses fault?
And yet everybody's still employed (minus social security, unemployment, and shady dealings). The thing with robots is... it requires people to design them, build them, and then maintain them, to replace a single job with superior efficiency. So that's 2 teams and a full time maintenance tech. The only people threatened by this would be the people working ground level at the factory. I think Dell or HP once tried an automated self help telephone system for almost a year before they got rid of it cause it wasn't adding value and pissing people off. Same with microsoft help, they've put decades of work into that little window and I still don't find it useful.
The publisher vastly underestimates the value of communication in the human society. It's more valuable than robots to start... if you can't communicate, you can't build the robot, nobody was born with a super robot building gift as far as I know. They go to school (teachers SCHOCK not robots) and interact with peers gain an interest and then build robots.
Now if they put a robot in say a good times and fire Pedro from Mexico - the green card, who's making $6 an hour and doesn't share the good times passion for making burgers that don't look like shit, now I'd call that progress any day.
Ask Good Times why they won't do it though, the ROI probably isn't even ballpark justifiable for them to consider it. Thus the completely false and absurd nature of this article.
It's fairly straight forward to write, none of you have done it yet, point and check for humans.
I wonder what priceless videos we can gain out of this expansion
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YersIyzsOpc
I'll keep looking for an mmorpg I can get into, till then SC2 and it's 100% free somewhat crappy servers ftw!
More or less, remember they are subject to military law though, the problem there is if your a sergeant in another country and one of your men gets in a fight, somebody you've fought with, would you snitch them out? Doubtful, the US military has a pretty effective code of silence in regards, just think back to the torture stories and the military cover up.
Because a soldier's primary function is to kill his/her enemy and most countries find that illegal, so all we are saying is if you want a fighting force left, we need to allow them to shoot anyone on site. Sounds harsh, but picture yourself in the boots of a soldier if you can.
Ron Paul would drop kick you lol.
Know of the FCC, that's what happens when government controls things like censorship, now picture copyright. I always think back to that family guy episode :P
Copyright needs to go into the hands of.... SHOCK... the artist, not the gov., not the RIAA, not the MPAA. They are the ones doing the work and they should have a say in it, if they can't control the piracy looks like they'll just have to tour more or not be complete douschebags so people will buy their music... aka the way it should be and we might actually get some decent rock going for the first time in 2 decades.
That makes sense, the hardware schematic is open sourced as is this guy's programming...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field-programmable_gate_array
Thanks for the explanations.
This kind of problem reminds me of advanced placement java in highschool :)
Real world coding is far more repetitive tedious, and fuckin boring.
Your assuming any question would be identical or have a similar answer, I would add your logic on top of mine though to get that extra 1% that it may or may not catch. Your assumption is quite great though, I wouldn't apply it in a real world scenario.
The question might also be personal or even abstract, ex. "what color are your eyes", there's just too many variables to factor in, you need a concrete base (in my case psychology), and then expand on it to improve your project over others.
I am assuming too that the person will answer in a manner which indicates a lie based on what we know of liars psychologically, there may be better approaches yet, but I don't think it's possible to nail 100%, closest algorithm wins.
If he started his own moving company and didn't post his revenue to the IRS, then the federal government already cares, ask anybody in prison for tax evasion.
I can see your point though, just that the law is a little ridiculous to enforce.
Your not gonna work for fb anytime soon sorry I can't be any nicer about it
http://homepage.psy.utexas.edu/homepage/faculty/pennebaker/reprints/Deception.pdf
I think part of the challenge is thinking outside the box towards stuff like this link.
I'd start by writing a dictionary table of lying words and query off that and I'd also try and research other things in the realm of psychology that indicate when somebody is lying in their phrasing or not.
If you think the only part to coding is the code itself, then at least you know where you now stand.
That's an easy one, the state would take this over and probably do a 10x better job at it, I seriously don't trust the weather service anymore. I get that it can be hard to predict the weather, but seriously? Their margin is almost at the global level where its just like don't bother. The local station is typically dead on though to the county level.
But ya, it wouldn't be a private entity that took this over, but each state would devot what they feel is needed (Cali would be at the top of this list).
Lol, think about it, you don't have a job, and you can't afford internet, but nobody's too far away from a library typically to justify gas vs internet cost. The gas is always cheaper. I know of most of the OP while researching jobs at a library when i was younger lol, it's also a great environment for honing in on your job search.
"Artistic" Apple users tend to populate Starbucks wifi channels, I acknowledge that the difference may be 25x, but it should be much greater imo, more ppl need to flock to the library, less to the starbucks.
I'm just curious, how exactly would they prove this? If I pay $20 to somebody for helping me move my furniture, wtf would Louisiana do? Break into my house (rule break 1), and charge me for paying cash to someone... with what? What if I am not obligated to pay my friend (which I'm not), but it still becomes a paid service, get my point?
This one should be getting added to...
http://www.dumblaws.com/
pretty soon.
Way to try and become a police state, thankfully it's just a state rather than federal. A federal law like this would spiral the world economy out of control and probably dethrone our government? This discussion would be better if we imagined this as a federal law, Louisiana doesn't matter in the least bit on a federal scale. Also, how did the people there pass this? Are they fuckin serious?
What exactly makes the design open source? Are they talking about open sourcing the drivers? Cause as with the omega project, there's just a long line of developers lining around the corner to do assembly level programming to reinvent the wheel to make it smaller (sarcasm to the max, nobody wants to work on this shit).
Also seems they have a profit model going here, open source here means, we'll take all your code and then close the source once we have enough and are making enough $.
I can post all day on any of these posts, but I'll chose to start with... YOU!
Virtualization is not be utilized heavily because... it lags like a stuck boar. On a crappy "test" box vitalization will run 101%, it will only be about 10% usable. RAM has as much to do with this as something buried deeper in comp. spec. such as FSB and registered vs unregistered memory. of course. Servers just run bigger badder gear even on the low end. A low end server is like 10x a low end desktop. So don't talk budget pc + virtualization, it's just not usable. It's usable for test case scenarios that don't involve using the VM heavily or doing any work in it, even esxi server lags, the web server version is just vicious.
That's not to say don't have VM enabled technology available, install vmware web server or w/e and use it ONLY when you need it, do all your dev / test work off the base install of w/e you put on it.
Where your post is kind of lacking is what kind of testing are you looking to do? Circuits? electronics? appliance / device programming? .NET? You know? this list can be as long as this discussion thread easily.
Your environment setup depends on that. Get the minimum of what you need to upgrade and then expand. I have a desktop and a laptop as well as a dusty compaq I don't use, the desktop is for gaming, no AV even for performance, the laptop is hardened and is for work, the compaq if I ever get off my ass can be a linux router, a crappy vm server, a media PC, a linux box (I miss these sometimes), or anything of that nature. I got mine for free from work, but you can get something comparable off ebay (don't go to a pawn shop for hardware please).
The biggest thing I found a challenge with is not the equipment, but the space in which you set your gear up, you want stuff to be easily accessible for reconfigurations and all your tools around you so you don't have to say walk down to the basement to grab the network tester.
hope that helps, I'm not bashing virtualization here (every server at work is virtualized on esx4.0 w vcenter management and those fags haven't even figured out how to fully utilize the awesome flex of this), but it's not the one size fits all solution slashdotters are portraying it to be.
This would qualify as a +1 troll post for the comments its brought out from people. But seriously, that may vary by city, but at least the libraries I know of are close to schools and students go there to study, especially when the home environment doesn't provide the proper resources. As to their future as brick and mortar book givers, lucky they picked up on computers and wifi when they did, I see more wifi users there than readers. The movie and music selections greatly vary, but that's a + too.
Kindle owners?
This works as long as Florida gets more money federally. If the state finances out of its own pocket... the money comes from the state's population. This is already somewhat evident, a house in Montana is 10x cheaper than a house in New York, but that's because land is a commodity in one place and not so much the other. Florida can't do anything about being on the coast, so it would be more expensive to live in Florida than Carolina, so Florida would lose population leading to less money and so forth so forth, until we have New Orleans all over again w/ 1/4 the population.
As long as the appropriate funding models are followed the states can handle themselves, then again we can also talk about federal vs state tax balances to bypass the government completely in terms of funding. In that case Florida's state tax would be higher than Carolina's while both get equal funding from the government, and what has to happen is the federal tax is set to a significantly lower level (the lowest state level) and state tax is adjusted appropriately.
It would definitely be different with Ron Paul, I am not qualified to say that is what we do or do not need though, I can say some of our systems are broken and need more than fixing to right the boat again, shame the government doesn't ship with a reset switch.
I'm saying the article makes him sound like a moron, I don't think Ron Paul is a moron, doesn't say much for you does it anon troll?
Why don't your write a letter to your governor asking him/her to start an oceanic science program in your state? Rofl
Ron Paul is about less government, so he is realigning money from the government to... I'm not sure, health care?
He is assuming the slack will be picked up by corporate America and independent agencies, or perhaps he wants to offer research grants later?
Either way, not enough information in the article to make an educated opinion on his stance besides it makes him sound like a moron, but it may not be as straight forward as that when you factor in everything. I'd also be interested in seeing department benchmarks to see if these departments are performing as they should, ex. for the longest time NASA was not.
I read a great article somewhere on how more and more people are starting to do their own thing, aka entrepreneurship. Corporate jobs suck, if you like working at corporate, I want nothing to do with you. It's all about the $ in short for someone else. With the recession, employers begin to add responsibilities to existing employees as they make cuts to stay in sync with the economy while maintaining their profit margin. Skills are required to be a entrepreneur, you have to be good at something, a trade, craft, or skill that you can make money with, and typically the people who do this have those or at least a lot of experience in their field.
What sucks is a college degree is so beneficial here but it isn't a requirement, but the difference is like... building a house with a skilled builder who's been at it 20 years, or building a house by yourself. You can figure it out eventually and make some flaws that you work through, but building w/ the builder will always be the quicker more safe, more productive route. College is the builder and your the student, typically. Not everybody can code w/o learning it in school first, and not everybody can be a quality entrepreneur without having knowledge of what they're doing.
If college becomes unaffordable though, people will still become entrepreneurs, just the quality of work will decrease as a lot of people who run their own business right now, do in fact have field experience and typically a degree.
Your a fuckin retard for even replying to any post. There's a hole somewhere for you, it's not on the internet though.