..because society values economically certain skills more than others, and if we're not all equal bunny rabbits bustling with potential, that wouldn't be FAIR.
It's cheaper to get a modbus PLC by the time you add a case. As a bonus, the PLC has CSA and UL certifications, so when your house burns down, your insurance is still valid.
China solved this problem. A few minutes of research will get you a USB adapter, and you can easily program whatever you want with python or direct commands from a shell prompt and a cron job to schedule if you want to be all oldschool about it.
Maybe this will drive some faster video cards.. I run 3 30" monitors (7680x1600); and while 2D and work productivity is no problem.. and, believe me, if you have the means I highly recommend picking them up - 3D surround gaming, even with SLI current-generation cards is a challenge.
What's even more impressive is how fast the 4K panels are dropping in price. Manufacturing FTW.
If you have a proper password, the magic cables will not work on iOS. It doesn't take long to brute force a numeric 4 digit. It takes a lot longer if that gets complicated; of course, that's harder to use, too.
"I do not consent to any search of my vehicle or my person"
"Am I free to go or am I being detained?"
"I want to speak with an attorney"
Magic words. If police have probable cause they don't need to ask; use the magic words and it'll stay that way.
I've gotten one hell of a return from my BSc. EE. Thankfully it's not being devalued, and as far as ROI goes, wow. Was it easy for me? F--k no. Things that are worthwhile rarely are easy.
Anyone who thinks these bootcamps are a substitute for theory training is a fool. They can make a great way to leverage that core knowledge, though. They're also great for churning out code monkeys. I don't want to be a monkey.
You know what's a substitute, though? -Free- books and training online on those academic topics. Marry that with a good, accredited lab work program and you're going to be onto something; I suspect, however, this will be targeted at a lower common denominator.
Democratizing forces will come to higher education as there's HUGE market inefficiencies there created by an artificial barrier. It's just a matter of time, or like I've said before, one of the Ivy league institutions to offer real credit in an online environment. Right now it's a big game of chicken to see who blinks first.
Lots of systems for automatically dealing with it. Unique and irrefutable record. Easy to recount. Don't like one machine? Design a better one to scan and count. People really pissed off? Count those SOBs one at a time in front of a crowd on a big-screen TV.
Ballot boxes are easily placed out in the open; they're easily observed and tracked by as many people as would like to. The entire way through the process.
Lots of very large, modern democracies just use paper. Including your neighbours up north. X marks the spot.
You get good at programming by staring at a screen and figuring things out. For thousands, and thousands, and thousands of hours. There is no getting around that fact.
The more complicated it gets, the more "anti social" it is. What does that mean anyway? Do we all need to sit around and code by committee?
What this demonstrates very clearly is you should choose your mate(s) carefully, as you can dramatically alter their probable success through selection.
Math students should be using computers to visualize and manipulate math, and help them understand what it is they're solving for.
This is best done with modern, kick ass graphics, and on any modern tablet, can be done in real-time.
It's an embarrassment to the entire teaching profession that calculators are needed on any exam, but more over, it is doing a serious disservice to students to not use them for what they should be used for - math visualizing machines. The TI calculators are used by and large to hand-hold lazy teachers and provide them with busywork for students.
Grrrr.
Also, HP48GX forever.. but I didn't need it until engineering school. I completed all of the math courses for my EE without a calculator - they weren't allowed by the math department, and rightly so.
Python has replaced Java for anything I used to do with it.
Javascript lives on.
IDEs are better. It's easier to port code. Much has been abstracted. I don't necessarily see where Java fits in the picture long term; it's been abandoned by Apple and Microsoft as a core language.
Freedom, and everything else, is a privilege given to you by your betters; when the chips are down, that's all out the window. Never forget that.
It's for your own good, you know.
Wish more people read history.
I thought about shelling out the dough for the 980s, but didn't, because, well - same CPU, lower clock, right?
Wrong.
Less than happy about this.
Deal of the century.
My 70 year old mother and all of her friends use Facebook instead of the phone now.
You lose. Accept it. Write the cheque.
And are well understood.
Short on balls to use them, though.
..because society values economically certain skills more than others, and if we're not all equal bunny rabbits bustling with potential, that wouldn't be FAIR.
..or Canadian, ~1 year is normal here, next door.
Americans have strange ideas about work hours.
It's cheaper to get a modbus PLC by the time you add a case. As a bonus, the PLC has CSA and UL certifications, so when your house burns down, your insurance is still valid.
China solved this problem. A few minutes of research will get you a USB adapter, and you can easily program whatever you want with python or direct commands from a shell prompt and a cron job to schedule if you want to be all oldschool about it.
Maybe this will drive some faster video cards.. I run 3 30" monitors (7680x1600); and while 2D and work productivity is no problem.. and, believe me, if you have the means I highly recommend picking them up - 3D surround gaming, even with SLI current-generation cards is a challenge.
What's even more impressive is how fast the 4K panels are dropping in price. Manufacturing FTW.
Actually, no.
If you have a proper password, the magic cables will not work on iOS. It doesn't take long to brute force a numeric 4 digit. It takes a lot longer if that gets complicated; of course, that's harder to use, too.
"I do not consent to any search of my vehicle or my person"
"Am I free to go or am I being detained?"
"I want to speak with an attorney"
Magic words. If police have probable cause they don't need to ask; use the magic words and it'll stay that way.
From a design company?
Shame.
I've gotten one hell of a return from my BSc. EE. Thankfully it's not being devalued, and as far as ROI goes, wow. Was it easy for me? F--k no. Things that are worthwhile rarely are easy.
Anyone who thinks these bootcamps are a substitute for theory training is a fool. They can make a great way to leverage that core knowledge, though. They're also great for churning out code monkeys. I don't want to be a monkey.
You know what's a substitute, though? -Free- books and training online on those academic topics. Marry that with a good, accredited lab work program and you're going to be onto something; I suspect, however, this will be targeted at a lower common denominator.
Democratizing forces will come to higher education as there's HUGE market inefficiencies there created by an artificial barrier. It's just a matter of time, or like I've said before, one of the Ivy league institutions to offer real credit in an online environment. Right now it's a big game of chicken to see who blinks first.
http://www.damninteresting.com...
There's some magic tricks outside of the basic programming for you. Paper is linked in there or easily searchable, and is quite interesting.
And yes, there might be reason to start to get concerned. Disruptive changes happen quickly. Eventually, we will be the ones disrupted..
Do you know how this works?
The box goes out in the open. Everyone can watch things go in.
The count is done with several people. Observers can watch. That's how it's done in Canada. Really.
The whole process, if fraud is a concern, can be watched end-to-end. There is no opportunity for "extra slips".
Paper works and is AFAIK the hardest to game and has the most oversight. I question those who are so quick to get rid of it.
..or just use a piece of paper.
Seriously?
Whats wrong with paper?
Lots of systems for automatically dealing with it. Unique and irrefutable record. Easy to recount. Don't like one machine? Design a better one to scan and count. People really pissed off? Count those SOBs one at a time in front of a crowd on a big-screen TV.
Ballot boxes are easily placed out in the open; they're easily observed and tracked by as many people as would like to. The entire way through the process.
Lots of very large, modern democracies just use paper. Including your neighbours up north. X marks the spot.
Crazy.
Haven't been to a movie in over 10 years.
I do have a very nice home theater; I'm guessing over that span it was cheaper.
Hope the theater operators enjoy the grave the MPAA is helping them dig. They can get cozy with the cable operators next door..
You didn't look very hard.
http://kanishkb.tripod.com/win...
There are others. It's old in internet time, though.
It's $80/mo.. you can't get anything near unlimited for that.
Be glad you're not in Canada.
Windows 7 will be a around for a very long time.. but I suspect it will be the last OS they have a monopoly on.
Anyone remember the background on boot for Windows 95, and all the controversy over "hidden shapes"?
Oh, the irony it was the cloud that killed Windows by rendering, largely, OS agnostic computing.
Computing IS anti social!
You get good at programming by staring at a screen and figuring things out. For thousands, and thousands, and thousands of hours. There is no getting around that fact.
The more complicated it gets, the more "anti social" it is. What does that mean anyway? Do we all need to sit around and code by committee?
What this demonstrates very clearly is you should choose your mate(s) carefully, as you can dramatically alter their probable success through selection.
Buy a good switch and a low power PC with some ram. Virtualize it all.
Smoothwall is a good choice, there are lots out there.
Makes it easy to do other things like IDS as well later.
Number crunching is stupid.
Math students should be using computers to visualize and manipulate math, and help them understand what it is they're solving for.
This is best done with modern, kick ass graphics, and on any modern tablet, can be done in real-time.
It's an embarrassment to the entire teaching profession that calculators are needed on any exam, but more over, it is doing a serious disservice to students to not use them for what they should be used for - math visualizing machines. The TI calculators are used by and large to hand-hold lazy teachers and provide them with busywork for students.
Grrrr.
Also, HP48GX forever.. but I didn't need it until engineering school. I completed all of the math courses for my EE without a calculator - they weren't allowed by the math department, and rightly so.
Python has replaced Java for anything I used to do with it.
Javascript lives on.
IDEs are better. It's easier to port code. Much has been abstracted. I don't necessarily see where Java fits in the picture long term; it's been abandoned by Apple and Microsoft as a core language.
The beat goes on.
Just because you automate it, doesn't mean you have to tell anyone.
Be a shame, you know, if those scripts stopped working..