The people in this case by and large live in the very cities in question; they do seem to want to live there, and they have to be transported to where they work, because that has been located elsewhere. If you live and work in the same suburb, you're not what we're talking about here.
It may have been "argued on this site", but interestingly enough, what is argued on this site is not the law. The law is being used to take the site down, and I suspect some dollar amounts are being applied to intellectual property along the way. What is good for the goose is likely good for the gander.
It's not about ancient history, or even about who started what. When a rumour went around that the CIA were plotting from the US Embassy to put the Shah back in power, it did not require paranoia for the students to believe it, since it was known to have been done a couple of decades earlier. Today, it does not appear to be paranoid for the Iranian government to believe that US, Israel, and others are infiltrating their nuclear program, and interfering with the rest of their government as well, and it is not illogical to think that nuclear arms might be helpful to keep the current government in power. No need to ask who started it or who's right or wrong.
I just can't get over the fact that a state senator (or a US one, really) knows that Gunga Din was a water bearer. Maybe US education is better than I thought.
Then perhaps that should have been the point; the original post clearly suggests that the union is complaining about the evaluations themselves: "I get evaluated at my job, should i be outraged?". And of course finishes with "i say start firing teachers that rank the worst", which is also beside the point. The question here is of whether people who agree to take low-paid, overworked positions to teach children deserve to be treated worse than any other employee who has a performance evaluation. To restate my post, do your coworkers read your evaluation? Shareholders? The general public?
As to "unwilling taxpayers", ok, speak for yourself. That argument can be made about any government expenditure.
Well, I do have to point out that if you know of no example of these cases going to court, then it's not quite right to say you know they hold up there.
When I was a younger fellow, I did a bit of work on kernel, xfs tools, mplayer, coreutils, and a few other things. Now, chances are, when I buy New Laptop X, my fave Linux distro goes right on with little trouble (except maybe for #@*!(*@ proprietary NVidia driver), so there's not much incentive to work on it.
That said, for a huge pile of source, it's pretty damned easy to use a tool like grep to find a problem and fix it when I need to.
Well, you didn't have to use Apple's tools. I used Turbo Pascal, Lightspeed/THINK C/C++, Absoft FORTRAN, and somebody's BASIC. And you didn't have to go through Apple's store and approval process. Those innovations came much later. The SCSI port was standard, but of course, who else used that? and keyboard, mouse etc... but it did have a standard RS-232, didn't it?
Well, I do have that much in a brokerage account, and like you, I transferred the unexpected bonus to my checking. There is a hold on the account, but if you can give me your account number, I think I can transfer the money to you, and I will be glad to let you keep half of it....
Are we reading:
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state
as indication that this is about defending against government?
The people in this case by and large live in the very cities in question; they do seem to want to live there, and they have to be transported to where they work, because that has been located elsewhere. If you live and work in the same suburb, you're not what we're talking about here.
Hmmmm where are you from? In Houston we call that a little one (making some assumptions about the sizes of your thumb and your glass).
Not Cajuns. They do it pretty much like the Chinese.
It may have been "argued on this site", but interestingly enough, what is argued on this site is not the law. The law is being used to take the site down, and I suspect some dollar amounts are being applied to intellectual property along the way. What is good for the goose is likely good for the gander.
Just posting to undo an accidental moderation; sorry.
By the way, I was in physics when P&F came out. Guess that makes me a cabalist, too...
...and adding passengers increases the denominator...
I think there's an app for that...
Damn. Wish I had mod points.
It's not about ancient history, or even about who started what. When a rumour went around that the CIA were plotting from the US Embassy to put the Shah back in power, it did not require paranoia for the students to believe it, since it was known to have been done a couple of decades earlier. Today, it does not appear to be paranoid for the Iranian government to believe that US, Israel, and others are infiltrating their nuclear program, and interfering with the rest of their government as well, and it is not illogical to think that nuclear arms might be helpful to keep the current government in power. No need to ask who started it or who's right or wrong.
Mossadegh was not assassinated. Late post, I know, but people get all kinds of crazy things from the Internets. Maybe you're thinking of Allende?
I just can't get over the fact that a state senator (or a US one, really) knows that Gunga Din was a water bearer. Maybe US education is better than I thought.
Then perhaps that should have been the point; the original post clearly suggests that the union is complaining about the evaluations themselves: "I get evaluated at my job, should i be outraged?". And of course finishes with "i say start firing teachers that rank the worst", which is also beside the point. The question here is of whether people who agree to take low-paid, overworked positions to teach children deserve to be treated worse than any other employee who has a performance evaluation. To restate my post, do your coworkers read your evaluation? Shareholders? The general public?
As to "unwilling taxpayers", ok, speak for yourself. That argument can be made about any government expenditure.
So where can I download your evaluation?
I think it's true, but it's not just driving games. I for one, am always thinking Mattel Electronic Football when I drive.
Well, I do have to point out that if you know of no example of these cases going to court, then it's not quite right to say you know they hold up there.
When I was a younger fellow, I did a bit of work on kernel, xfs tools, mplayer, coreutils, and a few other things. Now, chances are, when I buy New Laptop X, my fave Linux distro goes right on with little trouble (except maybe for #@*!(*@ proprietary NVidia driver), so there's not much incentive to work on it.
That said, for a huge pile of source, it's pretty damned easy to use a tool like grep to find a problem and fix it when I need to.
Well, you didn't have to use Apple's tools. I used Turbo Pascal, Lightspeed/THINK C/C++, Absoft FORTRAN, and somebody's BASIC. And you didn't have to go through Apple's store and approval process. Those innovations came much later. The SCSI port was standard, but of course, who else used that? and keyboard, mouse etc... but it did have a standard RS-232, didn't it?
I am anonymous coward!
Aw, hell
And by the way, omniscient slashdot filter, I WAS YELLING
I think microsoft have commented on the firestorm... wonder why Ballmer wanted to make it out as no big deal?
... if men tend to do more dangerous jobs (soldering, firefighting, etc...)
Yep. Slashdot
Actually, the FFT was described by Gauss in about 1805 (google "fft gauss"), but wasn't generally known until Cooley and Tukey rediscovered it.
Well, I do have that much in a brokerage account, and like you, I transferred the unexpected bonus to my checking. There is a hold on the account, but if you can give me your account number, I think I can transfer the money to you, and I will be glad to let you keep half of it....
Find Junis. Use his Commodore 64...
...also, it was Colin Baker, not Tom.
And yes, I am a nerd.
Even by slashdot standards.