No, the entire point is that any exploit would need to know the "unlock" code in order to operate, yet the unlock code is generated when the page is sent to the browser, long after the exploit has been submitted.
I'll agree. The whole split move assign system seemed really powerful to me. I wish that was more of a standard GUI feature, but aside from that, I found the interface nonstandard and somewhat quirky. Not a good example of having a custom GUI
LISP is about as high level as you can get, with garbage collection, macros, and more abstractions than most other languages combined.
PHP, likewise, is interpreted, and even it's array datatype is quite a bit above the machine level memory array, supporting dynamic resizing and the like.
It's not about what you consider "low-level" and "high-level." There are definitions for these terms...
This works great on the highway, but try it down a normal road. Drivers tend to have a nasty habit of slowing to five below the limit when they think they have a cop behind them...
Let's see, you go to a major city in the US, you have buildings, electricity, water, thriving industry and shops, a large wealthy class, high speed internet cafes, etc. You go to Holland, all of those apply, although there are some cultural differences, there is still the "Western City" atmosphere. Now travel to a reservation, say Fort Defiance, and look at the massive poverty, the large unsettled stretches, the falling apart cars, dialup if you find a computer at all, etc. Tell me which one feels more like Massachusetts...
I'll bite. Only someone who goes from Disney Land to Disney World will say that the US lacks cultural diversity. Going from Massachusetts to Arizona is a much larger change than going from say, the US to Holland. Customs are different, climate is different, culture is different. I can honestly say it no longer felt like the "US" I was used to. Then travel over to Florida, and expect different accents, food, customs, traffic, entertainments, etc. And if you really want a shock, go visit a Navajo Reservation... You might argue that they fall under a different government, but they are still within the borders of the US. The Navajo reservation I visited felt far more like El Salvador than like Boston.
I'd hate to be involved in either the submission or the review of that proof. I was rather intriuged when the proof was first posted, but I must say, this is something of an embarrassment
It sure seems like China is changing rapidly. While we are still well ahead of them in Space Tech., they have a lot of motivation. We are economic buddies, but will we enter a cold war with China, if they come to threaten us on the fronts we have historically been ahead on?
I'm glad to live in MA. We are known for our "crazy driving habits," and while we have our fair share of bad drivers, we have faster ones too. Unless things are clogged, the traffic on the Pike usually moves ~80 mph, and the cops don't generally pull people over until ~85-90 mph. Upon visiting Arizona, I noticed that although the speed limit was 70 or 75 in some places, people usually want it. MA on the other hand, has police who are usually not crazy, and people who drive at a decent pace.
Are you on drugs? The second sequence is what they currently use, the one that looks correct. 8.04 comes after 7.10, as 8.04 is from 2008, while 7.10 is from 2007.
Ubuntu is using an obvious and simple versioning scheme.
Prior to 7.04, I'd agree that you really did need commandline to get Ubuntu up to snuff. For the first time, installing the graphics drivers, along with enabling desktop effects was literally two clicks (NVIDIA), and I had no need of the CLI to get the system running (of course, I'm back to using it for programming, but that's preference).
People win it regularly because it is gaurunteed that one of the numbers will be the winning number. If only one person plays, the chance of it ever being one are sixteen million to one, and good luck with that.
Under linux, Firefox, and all the normal errors for me, no URL redirection. I think the Charter service in my area is improved over some, because I have had no DNS trouble whatsoever for the last year or so.
You can't beat multiple monitors. I do ASP dev, and I have one screen for viewing the pages (19"), which I run at 1024x768 to get a better idea of what the user will see. In the center, I have a 21" running at 2048x1536, which I use for coding (it works wonders, you can easily look at three or four files), and finally on the far right I have a 1600x1200 19" screen for Source Control, database management, and other programming related tasks which are not actually coding.
Three screens seems like a magic number for web-dev.
After watching I, Robot, (I have read the book too, but for now, lets talk about the movie), I really believe that that psychopathical computer had the answer. As humans are emotional creatures, we will always be greedy, want to kill, hurt and, and steal. We create government to try to prevent this, but governments are still human controlled, and prone to the worst failure of all.
We need to create robotic overlords, which enforce the law, with no back doors whatsoever. Of course, it will not happen unless someone really gets their act together, but having machines control our finances, policing our streets, and checking our actions is really the only solution in the long run. If we build robots cheap, we will be able to much better patrol the streets for drugs, have one at every street corner, etc. No more worrying about the sacrifice of human life in fighting crime, or bribery. And once you have mass produced units, even stopping small crimes (shoplifting, etc.) becomes economical.
Enforcing the law by stopping crime in the first place works best (no punishment if you never actually get to the point of committing the crime). At first, it may seem like a Nazi society, and it almost is. But consider this, a dictatorship is always more effecient. A dictatorship controlled by a perfect person will always be better than a democracy controlled by a group of imperfect people (you get racists, cheaters, power hungry persons, etc), but lets face it, the only thing which will ever follow all the rules perfectly is a well designed program.
No, the entire point is that any exploit would need to know the "unlock" code in order to operate, yet the unlock code is generated when the page is sent to the browser, long after the exploit has been submitted.
I'll agree. The whole split move assign system seemed really powerful to me. I wish that was more of a standard GUI feature, but aside from that, I found the interface nonstandard and somewhat quirky. Not a good example of having a custom GUI
heard someone reference Blender as an excellent UI... until now!
You're just making stuff up now. In no way are PHP and LISP mid level languages. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-level_programming_language -- Only machine code and ASM are low level languages, everything else is high level.
LISP is about as high level as you can get, with garbage collection, macros, and more abstractions than most other languages combined.
PHP, likewise, is interpreted, and even it's array datatype is quite a bit above the machine level memory array, supporting dynamic resizing and the like.
It's not about what you consider "low-level" and "high-level." There are definitions for these terms...
or right?
This works great on the highway, but try it down a normal road. Drivers tend to have a nasty habit of slowing to five below the limit when they think they have a cop behind them...
http://roland.piquepaille.hasalargemom.com/
Let's see, you go to a major city in the US, you have buildings, electricity, water, thriving industry and shops, a large wealthy class, high speed internet cafes, etc. You go to Holland, all of those apply, although there are some cultural differences, there is still the "Western City" atmosphere. Now travel to a reservation, say Fort Defiance, and look at the massive poverty, the large unsettled stretches, the falling apart cars, dialup if you find a computer at all, etc. Tell me which one feels more like Massachusetts...
I'll bite. Only someone who goes from Disney Land to Disney World will say that the US lacks cultural diversity. Going from Massachusetts to Arizona is a much larger change than going from say, the US to Holland. Customs are different, climate is different, culture is different. I can honestly say it no longer felt like the "US" I was used to. Then travel over to Florida, and expect different accents, food, customs, traffic, entertainments, etc. And if you really want a shock, go visit a Navajo Reservation... You might argue that they fall under a different government, but they are still within the borders of the US. The Navajo reservation I visited felt far more like El Salvador than like Boston.
I'd hate to be involved in either the submission or the review of that proof. I was rather intriuged when the proof was first posted, but I must say, this is something of an embarrassment
It sure seems like China is changing rapidly. While we are still well ahead of them in Space Tech., they have a lot of motivation. We are economic buddies, but will we enter a cold war with China, if they come to threaten us on the fronts we have historically been ahead on?
I'm glad to live in MA. We are known for our "crazy driving habits," and while we have our fair share of bad drivers, we have faster ones too. Unless things are clogged, the traffic on the Pike usually moves ~80 mph, and the cops don't generally pull people over until ~85-90 mph. Upon visiting Arizona, I noticed that although the speed limit was 70 or 75 in some places, people usually want it. MA on the other hand, has police who are usually not crazy, and people who drive at a decent pace.
Are you on drugs? The second sequence is what they currently use, the one that looks correct. 8.04 comes after 7.10, as 8.04 is from 2008, while 7.10 is from 2007. Ubuntu is using an obvious and simple versioning scheme.
You seriously didn't know this?
without two?
Prior to 7.04, I'd agree that you really did need commandline to get Ubuntu up to snuff. For the first time, installing the graphics drivers, along with enabling desktop effects was literally two clicks (NVIDIA), and I had no need of the CLI to get the system running (of course, I'm back to using it for programming, but that's preference).
IIS and ASP are both server side technologies having no effect on browser compatibility. As for a website integrating DirectX, I won't even go there.
People win it regularly because it is gaurunteed that one of the numbers will be the winning number. If only one person plays, the chance of it ever being one are sixteen million to one, and good luck with that.
Under linux, Firefox, and all the normal errors for me, no URL redirection. I think the Charter service in my area is improved over some, because I have had no DNS trouble whatsoever for the last year or so.
Come on good man. At least use "int main()" if not the standard declaration. Include your and use your namespace std. Take some pride in your code.
You can't beat multiple monitors. I do ASP dev, and I have one screen for viewing the pages (19"), which I run at 1024x768 to get a better idea of what the user will see. In the center, I have a 21" running at 2048x1536, which I use for coding (it works wonders, you can easily look at three or four files), and finally on the far right I have a 1600x1200 19" screen for Source Control, database management, and other programming related tasks which are not actually coding.
Three screens seems like a magic number for web-dev.
Apparently the rumors of the pending IE7 release for today were false?
Who is Senia Sheydvasser? http://www.tevlog.com/senia.thml
This is Senia
Your mom is so fat that she hurts the music business by file sharing
After watching I, Robot, (I have read the book too, but for now, lets talk about the movie), I really believe that that psychopathical computer had the answer. As humans are emotional creatures, we will always be greedy, want to kill, hurt and, and steal. We create government to try to prevent this, but governments are still human controlled, and prone to the worst failure of all. We need to create robotic overlords, which enforce the law, with no back doors whatsoever. Of course, it will not happen unless someone really gets their act together, but having machines control our finances, policing our streets, and checking our actions is really the only solution in the long run. If we build robots cheap, we will be able to much better patrol the streets for drugs, have one at every street corner, etc. No more worrying about the sacrifice of human life in fighting crime, or bribery. And once you have mass produced units, even stopping small crimes (shoplifting, etc.) becomes economical. Enforcing the law by stopping crime in the first place works best (no punishment if you never actually get to the point of committing the crime). At first, it may seem like a Nazi society, and it almost is. But consider this, a dictatorship is always more effecient. A dictatorship controlled by a perfect person will always be better than a democracy controlled by a group of imperfect people (you get racists, cheaters, power hungry persons, etc), but lets face it, the only thing which will ever follow all the rules perfectly is a well designed program.