if you watch with a five-year old's mindset. I do watch them all the time with my five-year old, and while "we" like all of them, we like episode 6 best (I always hated those stuffed animals, but he loves them, and now I don'd really mind). And 1 and 2 are pretty cool -- we usually skip to the battle scenes in 2, which are really amazing. And, by the way, 4 is pretty lame, with lots of not-so-dramatic action.
My organization (a large financial institution) uses Docsopen and it's a nightmare. It interfered with all saves and open commands, greatly slowed them down, hogged resources and (I think) led my XP machine to drag more or less to a halt by mid-afternoon, requiring rebooting. Maybe it's the future, but I don't think it's the present.
I managed to get it uninstalled.
DOS 3.3 with Norton Commander was much better! (I know, there are other alternatives . ..)
For what it's worth, it's the same for me. I love to code but never considered a CS degree, though I took a few classes in college (assembly, c (it was a long time ago) etc.) (I'm in econ and write some of my own statistical and other stuff in high level languages like GAUSS).
I'd say, finish your degree, work for a bit, and feel good that almost whatever you do, being able to program can be a very useful skill.
if you watch with a five-year old's mindset. I do watch them all the time with my five-year old, and while "we" like all of them, we like episode 6 best (I always hated those stuffed animals, but he loves them, and now I don'd really mind). And 1 and 2 are pretty cool -- we usually skip to the battle scenes in 2, which are really amazing. And, by the way, 4 is pretty lame, with lots of not-so-dramatic action.
By the way, Jar Jar is pretty funny, too.
My organization (a large financial institution) uses Docsopen and it's a nightmare. It interfered with all saves and open commands, greatly slowed them down, hogged resources and (I think) led my XP machine to drag more or less to a halt by mid-afternoon, requiring rebooting. Maybe it's the future, but I don't think it's the present.
.)
I managed to get it uninstalled.
DOS 3.3 with Norton Commander was much better! (I know, there are other alternatives . .
For what it's worth, it's the same for me. I love to code but never considered a CS degree, though I took a few classes in college (assembly, c (it was a long time ago) etc.) (I'm in econ and write some of my own statistical and other stuff in high level languages like GAUSS).
I'd say, finish your degree, work for a bit, and feel good that almost whatever you do, being able to program can be a very useful skill.