Colon cancer rates dropped thirty percent by 2012 from where it was 10 years earlier. It's been attributed to better screening technology, which can detect and even eliminate pre-cancerous growths....
The author says you should learn multiple languages, which I think is correct. The "popularity" question is really just a way to figure out which languages it's most important to brush up on if/when you're looking for your next job.
And there's really no surprise there. The "C family of languages," and also Python, is a pretty good start.
Honestly, the only way that I see this happening is if Google decides to make their AI interface open source. Which they might do as a public service -- but we're still playing in Google's sandbox.
Unless there's some way to get geeks to contribute their unused CPU cycles, like what SETI was doing...
Um, because while working at Sony (for 10 years) he was the one who acquired the rights to No Man's Sky for the company. (According to TFA...)
So he's very clearly the person at Sony who's most invested in the game's reception -- and was in fact the content director responsible for its presence at Sony in the first place.
I can't be the only one who noticed this. They're supposedly concerned that government agents have actually infiltrated Tor -- and yet they only have six demands that are related to that.
And yet there's ten demands about the Appelbaum investigation.
It seems like government agents infiltrating Tor would be a bigger concern....
The first really cool site that I remember was where a guy poured liquid oxygen onto his barbecue. You can still watch it at Archive.org...
There was a massive fireball -- and a huge rush of adrenaline. I was always kind of sad that they didn't find some way to keep the original web page on the internet forever...
Um, what would you consider to be a qualification?
I mean, it seems like a good answer would be "Six years as secretary of state, plus eight more years of meeting world leaders as First Lady -- and then another six years as a U.S. Senator." Your response is "Nah, that's not experience....."
I've heard the same thing, described as "Pile A" and "Pile B". (I think it was a famous science fiction writer, who had two piles of manuscripts he was working on -- but I can't remember which one. Maybe Robert Heinlein?)
> Alfred Hitchcock was known as the "master of suspense" precisely because he avoided chopping the scene to pieces with a million different camera angles.
I was all set to argue with this. ("Then how do you explain the shower scene in Psycho?") But actually, yeah, it's preceded by a long, slow, continuous take of the door to the bathroom opening. And for that matter, there's that whole long scene in "The Man Who Knew Too Much" where the orchestra keeps playing, slowly, slowly, and there's tension pretty much because the scene is dragging on...
He's lying again! Caldera never offered any license... (They only let you see the code.) You're making things up again.
I think the should've called it 'Jevuie'.
Colon cancer rates dropped thirty percent by 2012 from where it was 10 years earlier. It's been attributed to better screening technology, which can detect and even eliminate pre-cancerous growths....
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/n...
They won't put the good courses on kernel development on sale.
Um, it says "any of our e-learning courses." You just apply the coupon code at checkout.
I seriously don't understand all this hatred for the non-profit Linux Foundation that pays Linus Torvalds to keep working on Linux.
What part of the word "non-profit" don't you understand?
They sponsors Linus's kernel development.
Why exactly are we ragging on them?
The author says you should learn multiple languages, which I think is correct. The "popularity" question is really just a way to figure out which languages it's most important to brush up on if/when you're looking for your next job.
And there's really no surprise there. The "C family of languages," and also Python, is a pretty good start.
Serious question: Why can't they just invent a car that folds up into a smaller car so it's easier to park?
Honestly, the only way that I see this happening is if Google decides to make their AI interface open source. Which they might do as a public service -- but we're still playing in Google's sandbox.
Unless there's some way to get geeks to contribute their unused CPU cycles, like what SETI was doing...
Krebs quoted his mentor as saying this:
"DDoS attacks have become the Great Equalizer between private actors and nation-states."
I'm using an adblocker -- AdBlock Plus -- and the page loads fine for me.
It's still using systemd, correct?
Um, because while working at Sony (for 10 years) he was the one who acquired the rights to No Man's Sky for the company. (According to TFA...)
So he's very clearly the person at Sony who's most invested in the game's reception -- and was in fact the content director responsible for its presence at Sony in the first place.
"The problem with immortality is that it's boring."
(There's an episode of the original series where a man gives up immortality to be with the woman he loves....)
I can't be the only one who noticed this. They're supposedly concerned that government agents have actually infiltrated Tor -- and yet they only have six demands that are related to that.
And yet there's ten demands about the Appelbaum investigation.
It seems like government agents infiltrating Tor would be a bigger concern....
I just think it's cool that the Internet Society's Dan York is posting to Slashdot (and has a six-digit UID).
I was going to suggest that they re-name their commission "Boaty McBoatface"
The first really cool site that I remember was where a guy poured liquid oxygen onto his barbecue. You can still watch it at Archive.org...
There was a massive fireball -- and a huge rush of adrenaline. I was always kind of sad that they didn't find some way to keep the original web page on the internet forever...
Here's a blog post on the University of Adelaide's web site linking to the browserprint.info URL, if there's any doubt...
https://www.adelaide.edu.au/ne...
Um, what would you consider to be a qualification?
I mean, it seems like a good answer would be "Six years as secretary of state, plus eight more years of meeting world leaders as First Lady -- and then another six years as a U.S. Senator." Your response is "Nah, that's not experience....."
So what is?
I've heard the same thing, described as "Pile A" and "Pile B". (I think it was a famous science fiction writer, who had two piles of manuscripts he was working on -- but I can't remember which one. Maybe Robert Heinlein?)
> Alfred Hitchcock was known as the "master of suspense" precisely because he avoided chopping the scene to pieces with a million different camera angles.
I was all set to argue with this. ("Then how do you explain the shower scene in Psycho?") But actually, yeah, it's preceded by a long, slow, continuous take of the door to the bathroom opening. And for that matter, there's that whole long scene in "The Man Who Knew Too Much" where the orchestra keeps playing, slowly, slowly, and there's tension pretty much because the scene is dragging on...
DuckDuckGo, Ticketmaster, Priceline, Craigslist, IMDB, LiveJournal and......Slashdot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
This reminds me of that commercial where a man in Mexico entertained children with a puppet show version of Pac-Man
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...