I believe iTunes had an SDK for making device drivers to sync with as well. Many suspected they were either idiots or it was an intentionally manufactured controversy.
Like flying bumblebees, if the math says they can't fly yet they exist, it leads us to a better understanding of reality. When math and reality don't match up it causes a frenzy of investigation to resolve the problem.
I hope the math is correct, because that's the more exciting scenario.
Features don't come for free. But really Apple could avoid this whole problem if they didn't block downgrading. Let people try if they think it'll run fast enough on the oldest supported device, then let them change their minds If it doesn't.
But the problem is they want to prevent jail breaking and as a consequence downgrading is rare.
I feel the idea that immortality = boredom is way off for several reasons.
#1 Death isn't everyone's motivation to do things. Sure it works for some people, but those people should pause before throwing around such blanket statements.
#2 Shades of the "everything has already been invented" thinking. The idea that we'd run out of things to do. That's hubris. Seriously that's "Watch me predict the entire future of humanity right here in 10 seconds" kind of thinking.
#3 Motives? Do people who find this idea attractive enjoy a bit of "see! You can't be right!" schadenfreude when discussing this with religionists? It seems a bit of a reactive secular theology or philosophical trolling.
But really most speculations and predictions tell us more about the people who pronounce them than the future.
Like recent research into sociopaths, Vulcans have the ability to turn off their emotions... we like to think they don't have them all, but deep inside it's all lumberjacks pressing flowers and putting them in their hair.
He's a moral sociopath. An excellent example of a kid without regular feelings of empathy and love raised with good principles that allowed him to be a benefit to society and those around him.
Unlike Dexter where they had to cop-out and fall back on the typical "people can't change who they are" crap.
As crazy as it sounds, Spock is a role model for some of us less emotionally endowed.
Not only that, they are using completion to rate success. I disagree.
I took the massively parallel computation course online somewhere... It was great, I got a basic understanding of CUDA, compute units, transferring data, running carefully designed and constrained code on it, I learned about memory access issues and ordering data so it can be easily streamed. Etc
To me that was extremely valuable information. I did not complete, stopped about halfway because I didn't need to learn it in depth and I don't plan to specialize in that.
However now I know what kind of data the GPU can process, the basic workflow for doing that and approximately how much time it would take me to get up to speed and make something using that if I needed to.
I feel the course was a success to me, but to them I'm a failure statistic. Perhaps a large percentage of their students are joining classes without the intention of completing them and they need to reevaluate where their value lies to different users.
Eh I did my own with IKEA shelves. Two 8 partitioned KALLAX shelving units with a wide board suspended between them. Found a treadmill on Craigslist for $80, whipped up something to hold my wireless keyboard/trackpad with the handles. It's holding up 2 x 27" screens and I can comfortably walk and type several hours a day.
Yes but remember that programming is mostly about eliminating other jobs. So it does have a cannibalizing effect but in general everybody else has it much worse.
I'm working at home and I think it can easily lead to burnout. I need to figure out some kind of mental partitioning scheme. PLUS being surrounded by workmates 24/7? Yikes.
I know startups aren't exactly paragons of balanced living, but burnout is already a problem with them. Perhaps the physical use of space will help avoid it.
Yeah with Javascript being such a huge language these days a lot of youngsters don't know how entirely bizarre and hackish it's type system seemed back in the day.
"Huh? NO type?? You just slap things on it?? But, but, what about classes??"
Some smaller police departments give out trading cards of the officers to kids.
I remember it was pretty hard to get them as each officer only gave out his/her own cards at parks and schools. Still I managed to acquire one of only two known complete sets from my hometown when I was a kid.
Forcing positive social interaction can help lessen the "us vs them" mentality. Plus officers get a sense of pride if people know them by name and care more about their reputation.
I believe iTunes had an SDK for making device drivers to sync with as well. Many suspected they were either idiots or it was an intentionally manufactured controversy.
Like flying bumblebees, if the math says they can't fly yet they exist, it leads us to a better understanding of reality. When math and reality don't match up it causes a frenzy of investigation to resolve the problem.
I hope the math is correct, because that's the more exciting scenario.
Sounds like Zeno's Dichotomy Paradox to me.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno's_paradoxes#Dichotomy_paradox
ie: halfway,halfway,halfway, you never get there.
Have you ever said "I don't run a virus scanner and I've never gotten a virus"?
Features don't come for free. But really Apple could avoid this whole problem if they didn't block downgrading. Let people try if they think it'll run fast enough on the oldest supported device, then let them change their minds If it doesn't.
But the problem is they want to prevent jail breaking and as a consequence downgrading is rare.
Speaking of glass with compressed surfaces. This has to be mentioned.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Rupert's_Drop
Beware iPhones with tails.
Nice story thanks. :-)
Don't worry I've seen Zardoz. :-)
I feel the idea that immortality = boredom is way off for several reasons.
#1 Death isn't everyone's motivation to do things. Sure it works for some people, but those people should pause before throwing around such blanket statements.
#2 Shades of the "everything has already been invented" thinking. The idea that we'd run out of things to do. That's hubris. Seriously that's "Watch me predict the entire future of humanity right here in 10 seconds" kind of thinking.
#3 Motives? Do people who find this idea attractive enjoy a bit of "see! You can't be right!" schadenfreude when discussing this with religionists? It seems a bit of a reactive secular theology or philosophical trolling.
But really most speculations and predictions tell us more about the people who pronounce them than the future.
Like recent research into sociopaths, Vulcans have the ability to turn off their emotions... we like to think they don't have them all, but deep inside it's all lumberjacks pressing flowers and putting them in their hair.
That explains the urge to kill.
That says more about you than the nature of a being that doesn't die.
He's a moral sociopath. An excellent example of a kid without regular feelings of empathy and love raised with good principles that allowed him to be a benefit to society and those around him.
Unlike Dexter where they had to cop-out and fall back on the typical "people can't change who they are" crap.
As crazy as it sounds, Spock is a role model for some of us less emotionally endowed.
Not only that, they are using completion to rate success. I disagree.
I took the massively parallel computation course online somewhere... It was great, I got a basic understanding of CUDA, compute units, transferring data, running carefully designed and constrained code on it, I learned about memory access issues and ordering data so it can be easily streamed. Etc
To me that was extremely valuable information. I did not complete, stopped about halfway because I didn't need to learn it in depth and I don't plan to specialize in that.
However now I know what kind of data the GPU can process, the basic workflow for doing that and approximately how much time it would take me to get up to speed and make something using that if I needed to.
I feel the course was a success to me, but to them I'm a failure statistic. Perhaps a large percentage of their students are joining classes without the intention of completing them and they need to reevaluate where their value lies to different users.
And like the old Nature vs Nurture argument, the answer is ... a bit of both.
I also wonder if this test included turning from and into one way streets.
Recently I actually turned into the wrong way while making a left from a one way to a 2 way street.
O_O
Not cool. That's very easy to do when you're circling a block looking for parking with one ways and two ways all mixed up.
Another problem is that these busses often have very high voltage on their batteries requiring special certifications to work on them.
Eh I did my own with IKEA shelves. Two 8 partitioned KALLAX shelving units with a wide board suspended between them. Found a treadmill on Craigslist for $80, whipped up something to hold my wireless keyboard/trackpad with the handles. It's holding up 2 x 27" screens and I can comfortably walk and type several hours a day.
Not bad for $210.
Oh yeah?? Well your GRANDMA is a visible light detector every time anyone looks at her!
Yes but remember that programming is mostly about eliminating other jobs. So it does have a cannibalizing effect but in general everybody else has it much worse.
I'm working at home and I think it can easily lead to burnout. I need to figure out some kind of mental partitioning scheme. PLUS being surrounded by workmates 24/7? Yikes.
I know startups aren't exactly paragons of balanced living, but burnout is already a problem with them. Perhaps the physical use of space will help avoid it.
Yeah with Javascript being such a huge language these days a lot of youngsters don't know how entirely bizarre and hackish it's type system seemed back in the day.
"Huh? NO type?? You just slap things on it?? But, but, what about classes??"
Some smaller police departments give out trading cards of the officers to kids.
I remember it was pretty hard to get them as each officer only gave out his/her own cards at parks and schools. Still I managed to acquire one of only two known complete sets from my hometown when I was a kid.
Forcing positive social interaction can help lessen the "us vs them" mentality. Plus officers get a sense of pride if people know them by name and care more about their reputation.
Ahem...
Search users are not Google's customers.
Isn't it a show of power to be able to blatantly lie and yet nobody calls you on it?
If global leaders know exactly what you're doing and can't simply say it in public, does that not show fear?
Let's not forget her battle with the possessed one. And what would an unknowing bystander think was going on?
Reports are coming in of a girl riding on the back of a giant wolf, apparently hunting large boar with a spear.