In the past 8 years at my employer, I've been in 6 office spaces, some shared, some semi-private, and one wiht a closing door. I don't consider office space as part of my salary, but I do consider the choice of office space (within relative reason) to be worth "something", if not money. Same with office furnature, network jacks, and good power supply.
First was a small kitchen area, shared with 3 other people at different points of the day, with some overlap occasionally of all 4 of us plus an extra person or two. We managed, and as a group we all got along together well - we're all still together, same department, only losses have been due to a death and a retirement. Next had a private office, 3 network jacks, 2 different circuits, it was nice. Then moved to a slightly smaller office, turning down a window office because it was on the south side of the building, not shaded, and my desk was just a tad too big for it. Moved to a shared lab area with 1 other person for a while for renovations, then back. Just moved to a shared area with really high cubicle walls, but now I have a north side window to one side of me and a fishtank to the other.
So I guess it really depends on what you consider to be a good office, or a better one than you have now.
Those are brine shrimp you are thinking of... my fish love 'em as treats, and when they are babies and still have their yolk sack they are very nutritious for raising fry...
A smart business should design their site to degrade gracefully, so that if not a fancy layout with color matching and floating transparent backgrounds, someone can at least get the info they need/want.
Easy to install slashcode... its using it and getting up to speed that hurts. Install is as easy as installing a fresh Debian stable then apt-get install slashcode.
Simple - use an older linux kernel with oss drivers and play whatever you want on xmms, maybe have a "silent" track that just repeats (but don't violate Cage's copyright on silence either now....) xmms will lock/dev/dsp, and nothing else will be able to play sound. Oh, and other things trying to play sound tend to lock up...
Think about basic things, and boil them down to their most basic actions and decisions. Then write those out, and theres your psuedocode. Then pick a simple language like Python (trying to keep on-topic), php, bash script, etc. and get a good book or two on it. Then read up on real basics - variables (and data types), comments (put all your psuedocode at the top as a comment for reference), iteration, if-thens, and you should eventually get a moment of "a-ha!". Keep your written "code" handy while you RTFB. Then get a few more books, find some homework exercises, challenges, etc. from the intarweb relating to your language, and have at it.
Interesting. Release the blurb for all to see with no links, including the reply code (except subscribers) - let the non-subscribers search for it themselves if they want to RTFA. Then once the blurbs been posted for some amount of time, start displaying it with links and reply/comment links. Subscribers still get what they currently get, but non-subscribers who actually give a hoot (and will thus make the good comments) will be able to search for the article and read it and reply once it is "open to the unwashed masses"
Don't buy 'em in the first week, and check other places. I've been buying DVDs at the local pawn shop, usually about 3 months after they hit the stores, still in the wrapper at times... $5 each normally, some times down to $3 when I buy 5-6 at once. Still in the wrapper too for the most part. Just picked up both kill bills for $9 total. New in the wrapper. If you don't mind VHS, $1.50 each, less as you buy more.
The "what's stopping him" question extends directly to this and the idea that the second amendment was created for hunters or state run militia which the president already has constitutional control over deals directly to what's stopping him
Well, that is the basic idea of the 2nd amendment - its the one that protects all the others, ultimately. And, it wasn't for hunting or the state millitia. It is a right of the People - you and me - , and in Miller v. US (1934) the supreme court upheld that his short barrel shotguns and full auto weapons were not constitutionally protected because they weren't for military approprite. Funny how that changed in just a couple of years though, with the full auto M2 carbine (30 carbine, not Ma Deuce.50), Thompson machine gun, etc.
Dunno, one of my toasters (a 2 slicer) is against bagels, or at least the good ones I get at the local bakery. They're too big to fit in the slots. Handles that ultrathin "diet" bread fine though. My other toaster, a nice 4 slicer, is strongly for bagels, in fact, purchased because it has extra large slots. The toaster over is not a strong or vocal bagel supporter, but will tend to vote with/for the bagel as a "if i can't decide pick this one" tendancy.
Or just live where you can have a indoor/outdoor cat who doesn't grok a litter box... 2 cats, no litter boxes, no smell, no "accidents".
Been done. Ever hear of the Doobie Toss(es) at hemp fests? Used to be one locally for years...
clicky - about half way down the page.
In the past 8 years at my employer, I've been in 6 office spaces, some shared, some semi-private, and one wiht a closing door. I don't consider office space as part of my salary, but I do consider the choice of office space (within relative reason) to be worth "something", if not money. Same with office furnature, network jacks, and good power supply.
First was a small kitchen area, shared with 3 other people at different points of the day, with some overlap occasionally of all 4 of us plus an extra person or two. We managed, and as a group we all got along together well - we're all still together, same department, only losses have been due to a death and a retirement. Next had a private office, 3 network jacks, 2 different circuits, it was nice. Then moved to a slightly smaller office, turning down a window office because it was on the south side of the building, not shaded, and my desk was just a tad too big for it. Moved to a shared lab area with 1 other person for a while for renovations, then back. Just moved to a shared area with really high cubicle walls, but now I have a north side window to one side of me and a fishtank to the other.
So I guess it really depends on what you consider to be a good office, or a better one than you have now.
Maybe he's been to SE Asia and met a few "women" in his day?
Yeah, but all those black lesbian disabled 'Nam vets have to work somewhere....
Do the tinfoil pouch thing on your engine block. Works great.
Of course, thats only some DSL providers. Alltel (my provider) doesn't do port blocking, although the IP changes frequently. Thanks dyndns.org!
Static IP, multiple IPs, no blocked ports, etc.
Those are brine shrimp you are thinking of... my fish love 'em as treats, and when they are babies and still have their yolk sack they are very nutritious for raising fry...
A smart business should design their site to degrade gracefully, so that if not a fancy layout with color matching and floating transparent backgrounds, someone can at least get the info they need/want.
+1, reminiscent (sp?)
Easy to install slashcode... its using it and getting up to speed that hurts. Install is as easy as installing a fresh Debian stable then apt-get install slashcode.
That Mac isn't dead... its pining for the fjords..
Some quicklime and a construction dumpster... or perhaps a elevator thats in need of fixing... or a air tight tape safe...
Simple - use an older linux kernel with oss drivers and play whatever you want on xmms, maybe have a "silent" track that just repeats (but don't violate Cage's copyright on silence either now....) xmms will lock /dev/dsp, and nothing else will be able to play sound. Oh, and other things trying to play sound tend to lock up...
But will there be a PFY and a few contract engineers?
Think about basic things, and boil them down to their most basic actions and decisions. Then write those out, and theres your psuedocode. Then pick a simple language like Python (trying to keep on-topic), php, bash script, etc. and get a good book or two on it. Then read up on real basics - variables (and data types), comments (put all your psuedocode at the top as a comment for reference), iteration, if-thens, and you should eventually get a moment of "a-ha!". Keep your written "code" handy while you RTFB. Then get a few more books, find some homework exercises, challenges, etc. from the intarweb relating to your language, and have at it.
linode.com - manage your own server, less than $50 if you don't need tons of resources. I'm using a $20/mo plan, 80mb ram, 4gb disk, 50gb xfer.
Strange, cruise ships are sorta like that too...
Interesting. Release the blurb for all to see with no links, including the reply code (except subscribers) - let the non-subscribers search for it themselves if they want to RTFA. Then once the blurbs been posted for some amount of time, start displaying it with links and reply/comment links. Subscribers still get what they currently get, but non-subscribers who actually give a hoot (and will thus make the good comments) will be able to search for the article and read it and reply once it is "open to the unwashed masses"
Don't buy 'em in the first week, and check other places. I've been buying DVDs at the local pawn shop, usually about 3 months after they hit the stores, still in the wrapper at times ... $5 each normally, some times down to $3 when I buy 5-6 at once. Still in the wrapper too for the most part. Just picked up both kill bills for $9 total. New in the wrapper. If you don't mind VHS, $1.50 each, less as you buy more.
Find one of the skeptics, and strap him/her to the rocket you send up. Make a believer out of 'em!
Wasn't KC the one for Odessey2, where you could build your own levels?
The "what's stopping him" question extends directly to this and the idea that the second amendment was created for hunters or state run militia which the president already has constitutional control over deals directly to what's stopping him
.50), Thompson machine gun, etc.
Well, that is the basic idea of the 2nd amendment - its the one that protects all the others, ultimately. And, it wasn't for hunting or the state millitia. It is a right of the People - you and me - , and in Miller v. US (1934) the supreme court upheld that his short barrel shotguns and full auto weapons were not constitutionally protected because they weren't for military approprite. Funny how that changed in just a couple of years though, with the full auto M2 carbine (30 carbine, not Ma Deuce
Dunno, one of my toasters (a 2 slicer) is against bagels, or at least the good ones I get at the local bakery. They're too big to fit in the slots. Handles that ultrathin "diet" bread fine though. My other toaster, a nice 4 slicer, is strongly for bagels, in fact, purchased because it has extra large slots. The toaster over is not a strong or vocal bagel supporter, but will tend to vote with/for the bagel as a "if i can't decide pick this one" tendancy.