I have read the book "de broncode" some 10 (?) years ago. It read like a very exciting detective/mystery. The weird thing was that the book ends with lots of pictures and copies of documents that prove it's existence. In the end you really get the feeling that there was some foul play by some mayor company. It's not that difficult to make someone have a heart attack...
Because he is showing that a part of the government is going astray. He's telling the world that these guys (NSA, and other secret services in other countries) is going about it in an unlawful way (and if it is lawful it shouldn't be for a large part). It's no longer 'trias politica' and no longer 'you're innocent until proved guilty'.
There are examples enough that prove that mass-surveillance is hurting the public (i.e. swatting people over funny and misinterpreted facebook posts, reporters that where researching stuff, writers doing research...), I have yet to see evidence that the documents released by Edward Snowden actually hurting someone...
And please don't tell me that the false positives are to neglect as we really need mass-surveillance to keep fighting the terrorist. By saying that you just as well may say: I'm a sheep and I give in to the politics of fear.
This will enure that software run in governents in the EU will be required NOT to use US cloud providers and only use cloud providers that are active in the EU.
There is only one programming language that actually makes the code really nice to read; hence making the code elegant: it's called Whitespace (http://compsoc.dur.ac.uk/whitespace/)
I understand your frustration on the topic. But I have to say that I am one of the few that actually was forced to learn Java with notepad and a standard JDK without internet. The course was difficult but it made me a very good programmer. If I was to give a course to a newcomer I would still let him at least do one assignment this way.
Back to the original subject: I think that there are a large group of programmers that know how to program but are not really aware on specifics like deployment / tuning / classpath issues / CLR configuration / IIS specifics / etc. These things are taken away from you by using a good IDE and you can still be an good developer. Personally I want to excel in development and have thought myself all others specifics as well.
Just my 2 cents.
Strange how nobody picked up the more troubling notes from the question. GIS development and.NET do not really mix that well. If the company (and you) are serious about GIS (or it is a large component) consider switching to Python or Java, or be at the (not so merciful and closed sourced) hands of ESRI. I have been developing a extremely large.NET application suite for the Dutch government for the last 5 years. It is still not working. Problems are the use of Oracle and.NET (Oracle being the biggest problem).
Tooling needed for GIS jobs works with Linux and other open source tooling. Consider PostgreSQL with PostGIS and GeoTools, GeoServer and GDAL/OGR. It's for your own sanity...
It is why I suspect that antivirus companies are sometimes behind large scale viruses. The companies have so much to gain from an outbreak of a large computer infestation. Did they finally find out who unleased Conficker? Who assures me that they didn't write it? Or that they gave money to some script kiddy or hacker (now cracker) to do this?
that a lot of "pirated" Bit Torrent software contains malware. Not just the Windows versions, but the Mac and Linux and BSD Unix versions as well.
Hold it there: Linux pirated bit torrent software that contains malware? Why use bit torrent if I can apt-get everything?
I think you might want to add the word 'commercial' before the word 'software'.
Cable with DOCSYS 2 and up other users should not be a problem. The speed is also being improved. I currently take an all-in-one service from Ziggo a large provider in the Netherlands. I don't pay much and receive 10 Mbit/s with an upload of 1.5 Mbit/s. If i pay more it would become: 20 Mbit/s with 3 Mbit/s up.
Ziggo reported that they would like to upgrade their network to DOCSYS 3 and provide a 100 Mbit/s cable service (I am not aware of the upload speeds).
I have read the book "de broncode" some 10 (?) years ago. It read like a very exciting detective/mystery. The weird thing was that the book ends with lots of pictures and copies of documents that prove it's existence. In the end you really get the feeling that there was some foul play by some mayor company. It's not that difficult to make someone have a heart attack...
"You're the gymanastiest," which is simultaneously rewarding and disgusting.
Come on Mashup... you watch porn just like the rest of us...
Because he is showing that a part of the government is going astray. He's telling the world that these guys (NSA, and other secret services in other countries) is going about it in an unlawful way (and if it is lawful it shouldn't be for a large part). It's no longer 'trias politica' and no longer 'you're innocent until proved guilty'.
There are examples enough that prove that mass-surveillance is hurting the public (i.e. swatting people over funny and misinterpreted facebook posts, reporters that where researching stuff, writers doing research...), I have yet to see evidence that the documents released by Edward Snowden actually hurting someone... And please don't tell me that the false positives are to neglect as we really need mass-surveillance to keep fighting the terrorist. By saying that you just as well may say: I'm a sheep and I give in to the politics of fear.
Name one government that actually is in touch with their civilians. Everybody I spoke with is pro-Assange (on- and offline) not one government is...
I for one welcome our new overlords...
This will enure that software run in governents in the EU will be required NOT to use US cloud providers and only use cloud providers that are active in the EU.
There is only one programming language that actually makes the code really nice to read; hence making the code elegant: it's called Whitespace (http://compsoc.dur.ac.uk/whitespace/)
I understand your frustration on the topic. But I have to say that I am one of the few that actually was forced to learn Java with notepad and a standard JDK without internet. The course was difficult but it made me a very good programmer. If I was to give a course to a newcomer I would still let him at least do one assignment this way. Back to the original subject: I think that there are a large group of programmers that know how to program but are not really aware on specifics like deployment / tuning / classpath issues / CLR configuration / IIS specifics / etc. These things are taken away from you by using a good IDE and you can still be an good developer. Personally I want to excel in development and have thought myself all others specifics as well. Just my 2 cents.
or GWBASIC, using 5.000 lines.
Strange how nobody picked up the more troubling notes from the question. GIS development and .NET do not really mix that well. If the company (and you) are serious about GIS (or it is a large component) consider switching to Python or Java, or be at the (not so merciful and closed sourced) hands of ESRI. I have been developing a extremely large .NET application suite for the Dutch government for the last 5 years. It is still not working. Problems are the use of Oracle and .NET (Oracle being the biggest problem).
Tooling needed for GIS jobs works with Linux and other open source tooling. Consider PostgreSQL with PostGIS and GeoTools, GeoServer and GDAL/OGR. It's for your own sanity...
Does that mean that I can digg a hole somewhere in the streets of London (not near a base) and the police can not arrest me?
When reading binary the 1's are obviously phallus-symbols.
Not just Microsoft. Adobe does the same. In the Netherlands a DIGITAL master suite is like 3 times the price of the US version.
wonderful, cryptic commands like 'ls, cp, rm, mv, etc.
Never heard of etc. what does it do?
He must be talking about ReactOS... :)
You must be new here...
It is why I suspect that antivirus companies are sometimes behind large scale viruses. The companies have so much to gain from an outbreak of a large computer infestation. Did they finally find out who unleased Conficker? Who assures me that they didn't write it? Or that they gave money to some script kiddy or hacker (now cracker) to do this?
that a lot of "pirated" Bit Torrent software contains malware. Not just the Windows versions, but the Mac and Linux and BSD Unix versions as well.
Hold it there: Linux pirated bit torrent software that contains malware? Why use bit torrent if I can apt-get everything? I think you might want to add the word 'commercial' before the word 'software'.
I start at 7 each day, i'm the guy that has the key to the building. I am also the first to leave...
Cable with DOCSYS 2 and up other users should not be a problem. The speed is also being improved. I currently take an all-in-one service from Ziggo a large provider in the Netherlands. I don't pay much and receive 10 Mbit/s with an upload of 1.5 Mbit/s. If i pay more it would become: 20 Mbit/s with 3 Mbit/s up. Ziggo reported that they would like to upgrade their network to DOCSYS 3 and provide a 100 Mbit/s cable service (I am not aware of the upload speeds).
O? http://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Franky
$25 billion? Is that for replacing the broken chairs?
... no for the broken windows
I skipped that article because I read 'How do Greeks get excercise'... I see enough porn as it is...
That almost the same as ODF and OOXML, right?