One perhaps significant fact: the Go compiler is licensed under a BSD license, Swift has started as proprietary, but may be going over to something open this year.
It's a remarkably good excuse for the ISP not doing their job; the customer is forbidden to contact them. I think it's probably system-abuse on the part of the ISP.
Skin color is a quite superficial (literally) phenotypical characteristic. In any case, the only way to clear this up is with the research that, apparently, the FBI is trying to block.
All you need is a requirement for a really large print or, alternatively, a reason to shoot in low-light conditions. Most consumer digital camera manufacturers set a goal of matching 35mm film (they've actually exceeded it by now). But the joke of this is that 35mm film is just barely large enough to make good 8x10 prints, provided you've carefully composed your image. Me, I can't afford a camera that uses this sensor, so I'll keep on using my medium-format film camera. At least the parts are cheaper.
How can people, especially on slashdot (where this has been thrashed out countless times before), keep remaining so willfully ignorant of the goals of this project? Oh, because they want it to fail. I wonder why.
It would be nice to have a peer-reviewed paper cited, rather than a climate-change denialist (and another site, probably also denialist). So here's a link to Running's publication page. The relevant NASA presentations appear to be here. Have fun, folks.
Apple Objective-C is a proprietary language. Developers who've been working for 20 years in C++ are not going to take a year off from productive work to learn a new language, especially since this is just Steve Jobs ego at work.
The more is that the researchers have shown that silane turns into a metal at very high pressures; while researchers have not managed to create metallic hydrogen, they have managed this. The less is that it's only a 17-degree Kelvin superconductor--not an extraordinary temperature--and the pressures involved are on the order of half a million atmospheres.
The original article was published in Science on 14 March 2008; Vol. 319. no. 5869, pp. 1506 - 1509; DOI: 10.1126/science.1153282. Your local library can probably get you a copy; if you are at a university you may be able to access the online version.
Also, the USA doesn't have the privacy laws that all of Europe has; once we have a national ID, we become visible to just about every nosy commercial data broker and any reasonably efficient criminal.
I believe it's called the Fourth Amendment. More generally, the Supreme Court has found that without a right to privacy, various parts of the Bill of Rights are without force and that, therefore, the Bill of Rights implies a guarantee of privacy; the famous penumbra of specific guarantees of the Bill of Rights, much hated by authoritarians. See GRISWOLD v. CONNECTICUT, 381 U.S. 479 (1965).
...you can charge everyone else rent to use them, so all the VOIP providers have a problem. But that doesn't even come into play here; thanks to the wonders of deregulation we are right back in the Bad Old Days of unregulated monopoly; the telcos simply don't carry--or distort--traffic they don't like.
So do we send the worker home to starve, then? Seems pretty inhuman to me. There's two problems, really; we have a legal problem, and Mexico has a refugee problem (which subsidized US ag exports contribute to). We're going to have Mexican refugees until the economics are resolved (or unless we resolve on policies that kill many, which I hope we do not)
Swift == (Objective-C)++
One perhaps significant fact: the Go compiler is licensed under a BSD license, Swift has started as proprietary, but may be going over to something open this year.
Dart is in fact mentioned, but it's way down in the article.
So people can't just buy small cameras which aren't phones? WtF?
It's a remarkably good excuse for the ISP not doing their job; the customer is forbidden to contact them. I think it's probably system-abuse on the part of the ISP.
I guess he never got caught before. Wow.
here. There aren't perfect answers, unfortunately, but there are some pretty good ones.
That would be a very serious crime, if it can be proven.
Skin color is a quite superficial (literally) phenotypical characteristic. In any case, the only way to clear this up is with the research that, apparently, the FBI is trying to block.
All you need is a requirement for a really large print or, alternatively, a reason to shoot in low-light conditions. Most consumer digital camera manufacturers set a goal of matching 35mm film (they've actually exceeded it by now). But the joke of this is that 35mm film is just barely large enough to make good 8x10 prints, provided you've carefully composed your image. Me, I can't afford a camera that uses this sensor, so I'll keep on using my medium-format film camera. At least the parts are cheaper.
It would be nice to have a peer-reviewed paper cited, rather than a climate-change denialist (and another site, probably also denialist). So here's a link to Running's publication page. The relevant NASA presentations appear to be here. Have fun, folks.
$3/$7 machine is quite a bit to truly poor countries. That's disgusting. What exactly did MS offer? Or was it just schmooze-fu?
Apple Objective-C is a proprietary language. Developers who've been working for 20 years in C++ are not going to take a year off from productive work to learn a new language, especially since this is just Steve Jobs ego at work.
I don't have time to learn another proprietary language. Neither does Adobe. What a mess!
The more is that the researchers have shown that silane turns into a metal at very high pressures; while researchers have not managed to create metallic hydrogen, they have managed this. The less is that it's only a 17-degree Kelvin superconductor--not an extraordinary temperature--and the pressures involved are on the order of half a million atmospheres.
The original article was published in Science on 14 March 2008; Vol. 319. no. 5869, pp. 1506 - 1509; DOI: 10.1126/science.1153282. Your local library can probably get you a copy; if you are at a university you may be able to access the online version.
Oh and by the way, Real ID requires Social Security and the state ID agencies to reconcile their records.
Accounts of problems.
Also, the USA doesn't have the privacy laws that all of Europe has; once we have a national ID, we become visible to just about every nosy commercial data broker and any reasonably efficient criminal.
It is easier...but doesn't help transportation very much. And growing plants is a very inefficient way to gather solar energy for transportation.
I believe it's called the Fourth Amendment. More generally, the Supreme Court has found that without a right to privacy, various parts of the Bill of Rights are without force and that, therefore, the Bill of Rights implies a guarantee of privacy; the famous penumbra of specific guarantees of the Bill of Rights, much hated by authoritarians. See GRISWOLD v. CONNECTICUT, 381 U.S. 479 (1965).
...is anyone surprised that they treat their customers poorly?
I think Plan 9's Venti probably does what you want. There is a version which runs on Linux; see Plan 9 From Userspace for details.
...if your vote didn't matter, the weasels wouldn't try so hard to mess with the count. Votes matter--never doubt it.
...you can charge everyone else rent to use them, so all the VOIP providers have a problem. But that doesn't even come into play here; thanks to the wonders of deregulation we are right back in the Bad Old Days of unregulated monopoly; the telcos simply don't carry--or distort--traffic they don't like.
So do we send the worker home to starve, then? Seems pretty inhuman to me. There's two problems, really; we have a legal problem, and Mexico has a refugee problem (which subsidized US ag exports contribute to). We're going to have Mexican refugees until the economics are resolved (or unless we resolve on policies that kill many, which I hope we do not)
Most of them say, "I'm glad I didn't starve back home."