You don't get my point - the republicans spent 20 years trying to pass similar bills, and couldn't - not even with a republican president. So along comes Bill Clinton, and signs it. Clinton - not Bush Sr., not Ronnie Star-wars Ray-guns.
Pretending to support Bernie Sanders when it's documented you despised him is only furthering your deceits.
I dare you to find ANYTHING that "documents" that, you fucktard. Oh wait - you can't. That's why all you can do is post lies on slashdot with no proof. But tell us again how it wasn't Bill Clinton who signed the law, even though it was, and I even provided the link.
Watson is already taking office jobs. They're replacing insurance claims adjusters, costing the company $10k per year, a lot cheaper than employing a human. It doesn't have to be perfect to take your job - even if it's a bit worse, if it's a lot cheaper, you're history. A lot of white-collar office jobs are going to just vanish.
I don't lock the place when I take the dog with me, even if I'm gone for hours. You're better off depending on getting along with your neighbors than a security system. Experts say the same thing.
The screens are mostly for Sharp's TV division. 2/3 of their production is sold in the US, so expect them to start not just manufacturing screens, but whole TVs. Don't forget, there's another $50 billion they're going to be spending in the US, so it makes sense, if you're making the most fragile, bulkiest parts in the US, selling most of the production to the US, to do the final assembly in the US as well.
I think you'd be surprised on just how many things an ultra-left-wing liberal greenie like me can agree with based on evidence. For example - the wall. The idea that ANYONE can just illegally cross the border of any country without a prior agreement to open borders is a problem. The people who come and go legally are being penalized by those who enter illegally by jumping the queue. When I enter the US, I sure do it legally. When I return to Canada, I also return legally. It's not that hard to conform to the requirements - millions of people do it.
When I went to work in the US, I told US customs, so again no problem. Now if I had lied, or tried to enter illegally... why would I expect to be allowed to stay? We've welcomed more Syrian refugees than the US, so it's not like we're anti-refugee or anything - or anti-immigrant - just do it legitimately. And don't bring any guns, mace, tasers, weed, pepper spray, or other weapons or drugs. Oh, and no DUIs. Driving while drunk is a criminal offense here, so anyone from the US with a DUI isn't admissible without special permission.
He takes particular umbrage at Windows 10's continued insistence of resetting the default browser to Edge. Indicating that his patience has now run out, von Tetzchner points to a 72-year-old friend who was confused by the change and unable to reverse things.
People running Firefox or Chrome haven't run into this problem...
So... Microsoft automatically has the high ground for who gets to use seniors as their guinea pig? Interesting to see Slashdot take their side for a change.
What part of "install a few different browsers and let them choose instead of using seniors as guinea pigs" didn't you understand, troll?
Check again. Template code is generated before the translation to machine language stage. And I'd rather invoke bsort() directly than depend on a template getting it right - because knowing the type of data isn't going to also know that the data is ordered in such a way that bsort() can be used, which is far quicker than qsort() or any other algorithm. You need to know that the data is ordered properly, or bsort() won't give right results - and the compiler CANNOT know that.
Originally, new and delete were just wrappers for malloc() and free(). History - it provides context - and both malloc() and free() still work just fine in c++ - or did you forget that because you're wilfully blind? Same as you thing that std::sort will be quicker than bsort()?
Starting in the 1980s Congress debated bills to repeal Glass–Steagall's affiliation provisions (Sections 20 and 32). In 1999 Congress passed the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act, also known as the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, to repeal them. Eight days later, President Bill Clinton signed it into law.
Don't blame me that the Dems were too corrupt to allow for the election of Bernie Sanders because they wanted another (DINO) Democrat-In-Name-Only. Sanders would have wiped the floor with Trump.
I don't support Trump OR either Clinton (Clinton #1 removed Glass-Steigell, causing the subprime crisis years later by letting banks do stupid things, Clinton #2 - just look at the middle east, Trump - he's no Bernie Sanders, who was the only reasonable candidate - and the fact that he was left of the DINOs - Democrats in Name Only - is a bonus).
So don't be stupid with your lies - anyone can search my history and find your accusations of my supporting Trump are full of shit. You elected him, you get the government you deserve. And you better damn well hope he has a successful presidency, improving the lot of the average American, rather than cutting your nose off to spite your face like a spoiled child who didn't get their way and blames everyone (Russia! Russia!) for your candidate's loss.
You mean like Obama did by fining people who couldn't afford to buy mandatory insurance, giving huge indirect subsidies to the insurance companies rather than bringing in a single-payer health care system? Every president since Carter has screwed over the middle class - that's why real wages haven't risen in 40 years.
Vivaldi? Why in the world would anyone inflict such a non-player in the browser market on a 72 year old? Is von Tetzchner trying to keep them captive so he'll be remembered in their will?
Oh, wait - this is von Tetzchner, the CEO of Vivaldi - making the complaint. I'm sure that the 72-year-old didn't test all the browsers and then settle on Vivaldi; Tetzchner used his influence as a friend to foist it on them. Whine away, Tetzchner, or better yet, install a few different browsers and let them choose instead of using seniors as guinea pigs.
C++ keeps inventing new features. It's one of the best examples of bloat going.
And you clearly don't understand templates if you claim that template code runs faster. All template code does is allow the precompiler to generate code that could also be generated in other ways, such as by a script. The resulting code runs at the same speed in either case. As for sorting, you can write different sorting routines based on the data and needs that are faster than anything you'll find in std::sort.
So shut down all the exchanges. Make it illegal to use credit or debit cards or cheques, money orders, etc. to purchase bitcoins. DDoS bitcoin exchanges, or just flood them with fake transaction attempts that never go to completion. Ban bitcoin use in commerce. China won't be happy, because they're the ones controlling the mining of bitcoins, but hey, it's a scam anyway, and an enabler of crime, so screw them.
Banning bitcoin means they have to use other means - traceable means. Making the purchase, trade, or transacting in bitcoin a crime - if the business or individual being asked for ransom can't buy bitcoins, that ends that.
Bitcoin will make it harder to collect ransoms - which is the weak part of any blackmail or ransom scheme. That alone will put an end to a lot of those ransom demands - because they can't collect. The clampdown on money exchanges such as Western Union, which takes any old fake ID as proof, no matter how phony it looks, is another step forward.
If you choke off the flow of money, you won't even have to follow the money.
Pretending to support Bernie Sanders when it's documented you despised him is only furthering your deceits.
I dare you to find ANYTHING that "documents" that, you fucktard. Oh wait - you can't. That's why all you can do is post lies on slashdot with no proof. But tell us again how it wasn't Bill Clinton who signed the law, even though it was, and I even provided the link.
Wrong. The gift cards still need to be redeemed at some point. They all have unique IDs.
Watson is already taking office jobs. They're replacing insurance claims adjusters, costing the company $10k per year, a lot cheaper than employing a human. It doesn't have to be perfect to take your job - even if it's a bit worse, if it's a lot cheaper, you're history. A lot of white-collar office jobs are going to just vanish.
EVERY gift card is traceable to the point of purchase. If you thought otherwise, you're naive as all hell.
I don't lock the place when I take the dog with me, even if I'm gone for hours. You're better off depending on getting along with your neighbors than a security system. Experts say the same thing.
No, I mean "China" like the country, not Asians in general. China controls the majority of bitcoin mining. Stop being an ass.
The screens are mostly for Sharp's TV division. 2/3 of their production is sold in the US, so expect them to start not just manufacturing screens, but whole TVs. Don't forget, there's another $50 billion they're going to be spending in the US, so it makes sense, if you're making the most fragile, bulkiest parts in the US, selling most of the production to the US, to do the final assembly in the US as well.
And yet as of Java 8, nothing in the JVM is written in Java. It's all c/c++. Almost 250,000 lines.
I think you'd be surprised on just how many things an ultra-left-wing liberal greenie like me can agree with based on evidence. For example - the wall. The idea that ANYONE can just illegally cross the border of any country without a prior agreement to open borders is a problem. The people who come and go legally are being penalized by those who enter illegally by jumping the queue. When I enter the US, I sure do it legally. When I return to Canada, I also return legally. It's not that hard to conform to the requirements - millions of people do it.
When I went to work in the US, I told US customs, so again no problem. Now if I had lied, or tried to enter illegally ... why would I expect to be allowed to stay? We've welcomed more Syrian refugees than the US, so it's not like we're anti-refugee or anything - or anti-immigrant - just do it legitimately. And don't bring any guns, mace, tasers, weed, pepper spray, or other weapons or drugs. Oh, and no DUIs. Driving while drunk is a criminal offense here, so anyone from the US with a DUI isn't admissible without special permission.
Or don't use containers, duh!
He takes particular umbrage at Windows 10's continued insistence of resetting the default browser to Edge. Indicating that his patience has now run out, von Tetzchner points to a 72-year-old friend who was confused by the change and unable to reverse things.
People running Firefox or Chrome haven't run into this problem ...
So... Microsoft automatically has the high ground for who gets to use seniors as their guinea pig? Interesting to see Slashdot take their side for a change.
What part of "install a few different browsers and let them choose instead of using seniors as guinea pigs" didn't you understand, troll?
Check again. Template code is generated before the translation to machine language stage. And I'd rather invoke bsort() directly than depend on a template getting it right - because knowing the type of data isn't going to also know that the data is ordered in such a way that bsort() can be used, which is far quicker than qsort() or any other algorithm. You need to know that the data is ordered properly, or bsort() won't give right results - and the compiler CANNOT know that.
Originally, new and delete were just wrappers for malloc() and free(). History - it provides context - and both malloc() and free() still work just fine in c++ - or did you forget that because you're wilfully blind? Same as you thing that std::sort will be quicker than bsort()?
Starting in the 1980s Congress debated bills to repeal Glass–Steagall's affiliation provisions (Sections 20 and 32). In 1999 Congress passed the Gramm–Leach–Bliley Act, also known as the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, to repeal them. Eight days later, President Bill Clinton signed it into law.
Don't blame me that the Dems were too corrupt to allow for the election of Bernie Sanders because they wanted another (DINO) Democrat-In-Name-Only. Sanders would have wiped the floor with Trump.
I don't support Trump OR either Clinton (Clinton #1 removed Glass-Steigell, causing the subprime crisis years later by letting banks do stupid things, Clinton #2 - just look at the middle east, Trump - he's no Bernie Sanders, who was the only reasonable candidate - and the fact that he was left of the DINOs - Democrats in Name Only - is a bonus).
So don't be stupid with your lies - anyone can search my history and find your accusations of my supporting Trump are full of shit. You elected him, you get the government you deserve. And you better damn well hope he has a successful presidency, improving the lot of the average American, rather than cutting your nose off to spite your face like a spoiled child who didn't get their way and blames everyone (Russia! Russia!) for your candidate's loss.
You mean like Obama did by fining people who couldn't afford to buy mandatory insurance, giving huge indirect subsidies to the insurance companies rather than bringing in a single-payer health care system? Every president since Carter has screwed over the middle class - that's why real wages haven't risen in 40 years.
Philosophy is actually kind of handy. Look at the arguments we're involved with today - "what is AI" is one such.
Vivaldi? Why in the world would anyone inflict such a non-player in the browser market on a 72 year old? Is von Tetzchner trying to keep them captive so he'll be remembered in their will?
Oh, wait - this is von Tetzchner, the CEO of Vivaldi - making the complaint. I'm sure that the 72-year-old didn't test all the browsers and then settle on Vivaldi; Tetzchner used his influence as a friend to foist it on them. Whine away, Tetzchner, or better yet, install a few different browsers and let them choose instead of using seniors as guinea pigs.
C++ keeps inventing new features. It's one of the best examples of bloat going.
And you clearly don't understand templates if you claim that template code runs faster. All template code does is allow the precompiler to generate code that could also be generated in other ways, such as by a script. The resulting code runs at the same speed in either case. As for sorting, you can write different sorting routines based on the data and needs that are faster than anything you'll find in std::sort.
They're actually pretty centralized - China controls the majority of bitcoin mining.
So shut down all the exchanges. Make it illegal to use credit or debit cards or cheques, money orders, etc. to purchase bitcoins. DDoS bitcoin exchanges, or just flood them with fake transaction attempts that never go to completion. Ban bitcoin use in commerce. China won't be happy, because they're the ones controlling the mining of bitcoins, but hey, it's a scam anyway, and an enabler of crime, so screw them.
Banning bitcoin means they have to use other means - traceable means. Making the purchase, trade, or transacting in bitcoin a crime - if the business or individual being asked for ransom can't buy bitcoins, that ends that.
If you choke off the flow of money, you won't even have to follow the money.
RAII is wrong. It's sloppy. Stop drinking the kool-aid. And I stopped using valgrind a couple of months after I started using it. Write code properly, you don't need valgrind or ANY other memory leak detectors. Also, valgrind introduces bugs because it changes the running of your program, especially multi-threaded code. I never used any sort of garbage collection or STL classes in c++ - I alloc(), I free(), and f*ck new and delete. Not needed, same as templates, same as all the modern build tools, the whole "we have a problem to solve that no language solves, so let's invent yet another language", shit like ruby, the gazillion javascript libraries, etc.
Call me when your *nix OS is written in c++ - then we'll talk.