If 10% of your time is actually spent interacting with the computer, then just charge 900% of your normal hourly fee. "Thinking" is now just an expense covered by your rates:)
It doesn't raise the rates for EVERYONE. I find using taxis (and trains) far far cheaper than having a car (motorbike in my case). The cost of taxis in London may be high, but not as much as insurance (due to post-code orientated crime rates), huge parking costs, tax, petrol, maintenance...
Uber rates are cheaper due to lower overhead from their employer/agent, every single driver has told me they get far more work and make more money, and that is mostly due to the lack of heavy up-front cost.
If you want real high performance c++, don't use hacks to turn your single threaded code to MT. Use cuda and opencl2. (Both of which support a lot of c++ functionality) If you don't want to cross over to using external drivers, use std::futures. For real efficiency control other threads yourself!
Isn't Germany the only other country along with the UK that can hold up the economy of the EU? Will that burden be left fully on their(your?) shoulders be wise?
If another country needs a bailout, will that responsibility fall completely on germany?
This! We were making 3D games in early 2000's and whenever the engine had some new features we played with it. (we ALWAYS added a goldeneye-style big head mode to all our games:) We also added plenty of "cheats" which were runtime dev-tools, publishers usually demanded we removed them, but often we just made obscure cheat codes to enable them... though we made the fun harmless ones a bit more easy to stumble upon...
This is usually the same management who feel it's okay to do 2x hours for same pay. (ie. gamedev crunch). When we worked late, management knew they couldn't complain about anything.
Blowing off steam with a few hours on an easter egg over 6 months was the least of their worries
Help menu -> report a bug... Do you think it needs to be easier? There's the issue tracker( http://issuetracker.unity3d.co... ) for submitting other bugs... and this gives a very loose guide to what issues bug people the most...
*Every* bug gets checked and seen!
The problem a lot of the time is working out which bug needs to be fixed first by the limited resources we have...
I don't know how friendly and open you are, anonymous person, but I've done pretty well in my last couple of interviews; Accepted immediately, first (face-to-face) interview. Prior to those last two jobs, I hadn't had an interview for 8 years. It took me 12 interviews before I managed to get a job.
Basically, be more friendly, relaxed and relatable. Complain a bit about previous employers and how this new job will fix those problems (you may have to use your imagination), everyone has problems. A lot of the time, what puts perfect candidate A before candidate B is that "they could have a beer with them". Nobody wants to hire someone they're not gonna enjoy having around the office.
Since drinking heavily, I'm a lot more approachable, and apparently, a lot more employable.
This can't be far off, I read a paper a while ago (still trying to find it, this post is a bit redundant without it) which would "detect" the capital of a country from how often they were found in text together. (Probably pre-loaded with country names, this would just have the image as the needle)
I'm sure "Object 1387" and "Nyan cat" will soon be matched:)
+1 I usually use it looking for explanation of bugs, or if I'm being stupid, not for whole solutions.
If 10% of your time is actually spent interacting with the computer, then just charge 900% of your normal hourly fee. "Thinking" is now just an expense covered by your rates :)
It doesn't raise the rates for EVERYONE. I find using taxis (and trains) far far cheaper than having a car (motorbike in my case). The cost of taxis in London may be high, but not as much as insurance (due to post-code orientated crime rates), huge parking costs, tax, petrol, maintenance...
Uber rates are cheaper due to lower overhead from their employer/agent, every single driver has told me they get far more work and make more money, and that is mostly due to the lack of heavy up-front cost.
I think his point was that you'd have physical access to it, yknow, to buy physical bread and milk.
If you want real high performance c++, don't use hacks to turn your single threaded code to MT. Use cuda and opencl2. (Both of which support a lot of c++ functionality)
If you don't want to cross over to using external drivers, use std::futures.
For real efficiency control other threads yourself!
Isn't Germany the only other country along with the UK that can hold up the economy of the EU? Will that burden be left fully on their(your?) shoulders be wise?
If another country needs a bailout, will that responsibility fall completely on germany?
If I haven't heard it, it's new to me
Is there currently an open source alternative[to the closed alternative]?
This! We were making 3D games in early 2000's and whenever the engine had some new features we played with it. (we ALWAYS added a goldeneye-style big head mode to all our games :)
We also added plenty of "cheats" which were runtime dev-tools, publishers usually demanded we removed them, but often we just made obscure cheat codes to enable them... though we made the fun harmless ones a bit more easy to stumble upon...
This is usually the same management who feel it's okay to do 2x hours for same pay. (ie. gamedev crunch). When we worked late, management knew they couldn't complain about anything.
Blowing off steam with a few hours on an easter egg over 6 months was the least of their worries
Sounds like your program just put stuff on screen in response to a key press. Did the other kids programs that do that also get an F?
Find better programmers, pay them better, manage the project better to allow time to fix bugs after they've run through QA.
I know TFS says they haven't presented data... I wonder if they were collecting data at all.
-1, InFulSight
Next week
turns out us developers (the support team has quite a few seasoned coders) are geeks too :)
Help menu -> report a bug... Do you think it needs to be easier?
There's the issue tracker( http://issuetracker.unity3d.co... ) for submitting other bugs... and this gives a very loose guide to what issues bug people the most...
*Every* bug gets checked and seen!
The problem a lot of the time is working out which bug needs to be fixed first by the limited resources we have...
I don't know how friendly and open you are, anonymous person, but I've done pretty well in my last couple of interviews; Accepted immediately, first (face-to-face) interview.
Prior to those last two jobs, I hadn't had an interview for 8 years. It took me 12 interviews before I managed to get a job.
Basically, be more friendly, relaxed and relatable. Complain a bit about previous employers and how this new job will fix those problems (you may have to use your imagination), everyone has problems. A lot of the time, what puts perfect candidate A before candidate B is that "they could have a beer with them". Nobody wants to hire someone they're not gonna enjoy having around the office.
Since drinking heavily, I'm a lot more approachable, and apparently, a lot more employable.
Hope this *hic* helps.
I personally would say legacy code is code that is planned to be refactored/replaced.
I write plenty of code, first time, which is designed to last... until it NEEDS replacing.
Isn't this how they caught Al Capone?
But unfortunately, the budget has been spent on some new management tools.
That's pretty damned squashed, our eyeballs are normally above the nose.
"despite a high demand in the market and jobs that start with $60,000 salaries"
These things go hand in hand, let's keep it that way.
This can't be far off, I read a paper a while ago (still trying to find it, this post is a bit redundant without it) which would "detect" the capital of a country from how often they were found in text together. (Probably pre-loaded with country names, this would just have the image as the needle)
I'm sure "Object 1387" and "Nyan cat" will soon be matched :)
Does it work in real time? I can't find any more information than marketing buzz in the article (and the BYU article)...
Is there a paper or anything with a bit more [technical] detail?