Is English not your primary language, or are you being difficult on purpose?
When people use 'feels' in this context they mean 'produces a tactile sensation'. We are concerned with this because that's the best way to determine the build quality of a product.
The devices mentioned feel (again, words can be tricky, try to follow along here) like cheap pieces of shit, because they are cheap pieces of shit - purposefully built to fall apart withing 1-2 years.
Physically examining something is pretty much the exact opposite of "subjective assumptions". I don't really understand what kind of "data" you're looking for, do you not trust your senses to tell you what materials something is made of?
I don't know who the hell decided that the only acceptable expression of "sexy" is 'round corners and shiny surfaces', but I hate that guy. Has made shopping for electronics a lot harder, unless you're super into stuff that looks like Apple made it, obviously.
That and motherfucking glossy, reflective as fuck screens - I can't imagine how anyone thought that abomination was a good idea. Seriously, what the fuck?
So one would be hard-pressed to argue that there is a positive correlation between gun control and murder rate (regardless of weapon).
Oh, what nonsense.
The US is by far the highest of the developed nations on that list. The next one after it is Finland, with half the murder rate of the US, and all Western European countries have rates 3 to 5 times lower. Japan has some of the strictest gun laws around (no guns for anyone, essentially), its murder rate is 14 times lower.
Sure, if you want to compare the US to Colombia, Uganda, and Sudan it looks great. It's also utterly ridiculous to say that the difference has anything to do with gun laws.
Personally, I don't think the US's #1 spot has that much to do with gun control, or that banning guns tomorrow would magically transform the US into Germany. But to say there is no correlation is just stupid.
Maybe you are right....how exactly do you expect the journalist to know this is wrong? Ask a PhD? That's what he did. Maybe he can find another one who is on the opposite side of the issue.......
I have to admit, I honestly don't know if you're being facetious (so, never mind if you are), but yes, that's essentially a journalist's entire job description: doing research to confirm whatever someone is telling them is kind of the whole reason they are there.
Maybe I could follow along if you added a couple more paragraphs about what pixels are.
Gosh, I hope the next monitor I buy will have enough vectors to support this futuristic technology. I probably need to hurry, do you think pixels will be dead before the end of the year?
That's exactly why it's the journalists fault - their job isn't to follow along with whatever self-promoting bullshit the person being interviewed is spewing.
What didn't work well with the Pixar and Marvel acquisitions? I was under the impression that they are both going pretty strong (admittedly, I'm not that well versed in those franchises).
All the complaints about style translate to "doesn't look like a goddamn MacBook" - we know that Apple invented design, so anything that isn't trying to look like an Apple product must not be using any.
After all, all the other laptop manufacturers have obliged, what's Lenovo's problem?
The Tesla/Edison thing does tend to get overstated a bit, but your last example doesn't actually include any contributions from Edison.
It's precisely the system that Westinghouse and Tesla were advocating, and the adoption of which Edison tried to stop because he was so invested in DC power distribution. It's not like he invented the concept of direct current itself.
Is English not your primary language, or are you being difficult on purpose?
When people use 'feels' in this context they mean 'produces a tactile sensation'. We are concerned with this because that's the best way to determine the build quality of a product.
The devices mentioned feel (again, words can be tricky, try to follow along here) like cheap pieces of shit, because they are cheap pieces of shit - purposefully built to fall apart withing 1-2 years.
Physically examining something is pretty much the exact opposite of "subjective assumptions". I don't really understand what kind of "data" you're looking for, do you not trust your senses to tell you what materials something is made of?
I don't know who the hell decided that the only acceptable expression of "sexy" is 'round corners and shiny surfaces', but I hate that guy. Has made shopping for electronics a lot harder, unless you're super into stuff that looks like Apple made it, obviously.
That and motherfucking glossy, reflective as fuck screens - I can't imagine how anyone thought that abomination was a good idea. Seriously, what the fuck?
So one would be hard-pressed to argue that there is a positive correlation between gun control and murder rate (regardless of weapon).
Oh, what nonsense.
The US is by far the highest of the developed nations on that list. The next one after it is Finland, with half the murder rate of the US, and all Western European countries have rates 3 to 5 times lower. Japan has some of the strictest gun laws around (no guns for anyone, essentially), its murder rate is 14 times lower.
Sure, if you want to compare the US to Colombia, Uganda, and Sudan it looks great. It's also utterly ridiculous to say that the difference has anything to do with gun laws.
Personally, I don't think the US's #1 spot has that much to do with gun control, or that banning guns tomorrow would magically transform the US into Germany. But to say there is no correlation is just stupid.
You found a way to work a "tech" angle into this story.
Congratulations.
Maybe you are right....how exactly do you expect the journalist to know this is wrong? Ask a PhD? That's what he did. Maybe he can find another one who is on the opposite side of the issue.......
I have to admit, I honestly don't know if you're being facetious (so, never mind if you are), but yes, that's essentially a journalist's entire job description: doing research to confirm whatever someone is telling them is kind of the whole reason they are there.
Google doesn't let you weight search terms, but they do the other two: http://support.google.com/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=136861&rd=2
Maybe I could follow along if you added a couple more paragraphs about what pixels are.
Gosh, I hope the next monitor I buy will have enough vectors to support this futuristic technology. I probably need to hurry, do you think pixels will be dead before the end of the year?
That's exactly why it's the journalists fault - their job isn't to follow along with whatever self-promoting bullshit the person being interviewed is spewing.
We're stuck with JavaScript in webapps (where there are plenty of excellent implementations already), but the JVM has little to do with that.
If they just want a native general purpose scripting language for the JVM, then JS seems like a terrible choice.
At least, the work that goes into this project should benefit other dynamic languages on the JVM as well.
No. Just, no.
They're public officials, performing a public service, in public - absolutely no one has less of an expectation of privacy.
There is just no comparison between that and what the average citizen.
Sure.
I'm white enough to eventually cost the PD a fair amount of money.
If you can't afford health insurance, I'm not exactly salivating over the prospect of collecting your vast assets.
And what does your family have to do with anything? Were they responsible for your decisions?
Like it or not, your choices do affect the rest of us in this case.
What didn't work well with the Pixar and Marvel acquisitions? I was under the impression that they are both going pretty strong (admittedly, I'm not that well versed in those franchises).
May not be such a bad thing - do we really need any more Star Wars spoofs?
All the complaints about style translate to "doesn't look like a goddamn MacBook" - we know that Apple invented design, so anything that isn't trying to look like an Apple product must not be using any.
After all, all the other laptop manufacturers have obliged, what's Lenovo's problem?
The Tesla/Edison thing does tend to get overstated a bit, but your last example doesn't actually include any contributions from Edison.
It's precisely the system that Westinghouse and Tesla were advocating, and the adoption of which Edison tried to stop because he was so invested in DC power distribution. It's not like he invented the concept of direct current itself.
An unsuccessful test isn't "failure", it's "data".
On the off-chance you're actually serious - you really think Yahoo isn't collecting exactly the same data as Google?
Yeah, I thought it was a little odd to essentially say "using numbers that I know are wrong, I've come up with this comparison".
Why is inflation such a difficult concept to grasp? Absolute dollar comparisons are meaningless if they're more than a few years apart.
I love that the story isn't "Apple made some shitty ads", but rather "people are mean to Apple (because of their shitty ads)".
Something that's been around for 80 years, and at its height was selling 4 million copies weekly is a 'failed product' now?
Has been since 1826: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/shutter
They're like a French No Doubt, right?
Excellent work bringing attention to this issue, you should tackle nigger rights next!
Von Neumann was influential in the design modern computers, Turing was one of the major influences in the development of Computer Science.
There isn't really much overlap between the two.