If that's all the time you've got, you've got a systemic problem. This kind of thing needs to be an ongoing process of education. You can't cover anything like this in half a day. Or a full day. WTH.
Schedule "brown bag" sessions once a week for ongoing training and discussion, and get subject matter experts in for different things: security, TDD, algorithms, optimization, etc. And keep going; don't just do each of those once, because each of those is a full course full of stuff (at least).
If you're only going to get one day for this, collect a bunch of online resources for people and go over it. Then find a job at a place that values ongoing education, because HOLY CRAP. How can a *University* not value ongoing education?!
It's too bad the project at Sun to produce an asynchronous CPU was cancelled; that seemed like an interesting path. I wonder if anyone else if experimenting with that now.
I'd much rather they release the source to all the Apple ][ &// lines. Apple ][, ][+,//e,//e Platinum,//c ,//c Plus, and//GS. And anything else I missed.
8N1 ATH Acoustic Couplers;^) DSDD Floppy notcher HAM (not radio) The Turbo button is not always your friend Green vs Amber, the eternal war 8-bit Bucket List: TWO floppy drives!
Wordpress.com - don't self-host because you don't have the experience to secure and maintain it properly. Once you start adding plugins, the maintenance and security issues pile up exponentially. It _can_ be both performant and secure, but only by someone who REALLY knows what they're doing.
I learned my first programming language - Apple BASIC - from computer magazines back in the early 80s, then had it reinforced in 'Computer Math' classes in high school, and learned a few more languages in college (Fortran 77 and Turbo Pascal in classes, and REXX on my own). Then took C in a college course in the mid-90s, plus learned all the web stuff on my own starting in '94. Everything I use professionally, I learned on my own, other than the logic course I took first semester of college (which should be a required course in high school, IMO).
Use a GUI like Atlassian's "SourceTree". It's what we use at work, and it works pretty well. You'll still want at least one Git expert on the team for when someone does something stupid, but you'll need that for whatever platform you choose.
It's great when you can get away with that, but all too many companies (like where I work) have to deal with our customers as they are, not how we would wish them to be.
It's all the people like you who are the problem. If "use something standards-compliant or have a bad experience" were the universal norm, we wouldn't have these problems.
You say that like you think it's my decision to do this. I assure you, it is not.
3872? Punk kid needs to get off my lawn. :)
If that's all the time you've got, you've got a systemic problem. This kind of thing needs to be an ongoing process of education. You can't cover anything like this in half a day. Or a full day. WTH.
Schedule "brown bag" sessions once a week for ongoing training and discussion, and get subject matter experts in for different things: security, TDD, algorithms, optimization, etc. And keep going; don't just do each of those once, because each of those is a full course full of stuff (at least).
If you're only going to get one day for this, collect a bunch of online resources for people and go over it. Then find a job at a place that values ongoing education, because HOLY CRAP. How can a *University* not value ongoing education?!
They do different things, and can - and often are - used together.
It's too bad the project at Sun to produce an asynchronous CPU was cancelled; that seemed like an interesting path. I wonder if anyone else if experimenting with that now.
I'd much rather they release the source to all the Apple ][ & // lines. Apple ][, ][+, //e, //e Platinum, //c , //c Plus, and //GS. And anything else I missed.
They can keep the source to the Apple ///. :)
Now if they can just make a self-sealing stem bolt, we'll be all set!
A bumpersticker I saw at a Microsoft parking lot once:
"The computer is your friend. Trust the computer."
8N1 ;^)
ATH
Acoustic Couplers
DSDD
Floppy notcher
HAM (not radio)
The Turbo button is not always your friend
Green vs Amber, the eternal war
8-bit Bucket List: TWO floppy drives!
I'm old.
Looks like Chris Rock called it. Well-done, sir.
Kenny Baker isn't dead; he's just returning the map.
136 employees before layoffs? Amazon could absorb that in a DAY and not even blink. I'm not exaggerating.
Not a _living_ one.
Wordpress.com - don't self-host because you don't have the experience to secure and maintain it properly. Once you start adding plugins, the maintenance and security issues pile up exponentially. It _can_ be both performant and secure, but only by someone who REALLY knows what they're doing.
I learned my first programming language - Apple BASIC - from computer magazines back in the early 80s, then had it reinforced in 'Computer Math' classes in high school, and learned a few more languages in college (Fortran 77 and Turbo Pascal in classes, and REXX on my own). Then took C in a college course in the mid-90s, plus learned all the web stuff on my own starting in '94. Everything I use professionally, I learned on my own, other than the logic course I took first semester of college (which should be a required course in high school, IMO).
i will believe 1.2Gbps when i see it in a respectable review site.
You should check out reviews of Samsung's _consumer_ PCI-e M.2 SSDs, then. This thing is not that fast by comparison - it's just very dense.
FLoating-point Operations Per Second. It makes no sense to speak of one FLOP, two FLOPs, as the S is not for plural.
This comment is endorsed by Pedantic-Man(tm)!
Application-wise, probably not much, what with the official move over to ART.
The stopped clock is right on something.
Nothing new here - I've been reading novels for decades!
Read the article; they mention lasers; but, sadly I did NOT see any mention of sharks.
Tim S.
Sharks are often just metaphors. Though sometimes a shark is just a shark.
Nothing new here - I've been reading novels for decades!
Interesting. I've never even _heard_ of gitk before. That bug sounds rather scary, though.
We're using SourceTree where I work as it's an Atlassian product that integrates well with the rest of the Atlassian suite, which we're also using.
Use a GUI like Atlassian's "SourceTree". It's what we use at work, and it works pretty well. You'll still want at least one Git expert on the team for when someone does something stupid, but you'll need that for whatever platform you choose.
http://avnetexpress.avnet.com/...
$306. I don't know if that is wholesale or what.
The part is specific to a Boeing 777. MH370 is the only missing Boeing 777.
It's great when you can get away with that, but all too many companies (like where I work) have to deal with our customers as they are, not how we would wish them to be.
It's all the people like you who are the problem. If "use something standards-compliant or have a bad experience" were the universal norm, we wouldn't have these problems.
You say that like you think it's my decision to do this. I assure you, it is not.