Hint: I did it three years ago, and our latency was super low and our hosting costs were cheap. Had fewer memory issues than the JavaScript programmers, too. It's not that Spring is easier or harder, it's that if you've never learned assembly, you have no fucking clue what your computer is doing. Great, you memorized a lot of functions, but could you write it Spring yourself? If not, you are a slave to library writers, and when they decide to hurt you, you get hurt.
I think the article is bullshit and their methodology sucks, but Triple byte is a convenient way to screen a lot of companies quickly if you're looking for a new job. (Along those lines, companies like LinkedIn are offering $250k total compensation to new hires these days, although not entry level).
Stop saying stupid things and say what the difference is between parallelism and concurrency. Concurrency is really nice in Erlang but I was more attracted by its stability.
Yeah. Different people have different definitions and from the point of view of the programmer it doesn't really matter if they are happening at the same time or not.
Storage isn't an issue, so why not have some pre-Code 1930s films
Yeah they could definitely do that.
When the 'modern' TV era arrived, I spent a lot of time binging on various series, but after a while I got over it. They didn't attract me the way they used to, it suddenly became a game of critiquing the writers, figuring out what they were trying to do, instead of enjoying and being swept away by a story. So now I don't watch TV or Netflix or Hulu much. A lot of the content I can just see where it's going, getting a story dribbled out one plot element per episode, eventually leading nowhere.
I wonder if the public in general is going to do the same, or people will just go along with it. Most likely the media companies will keep trying different stuff until they find a formula that works, I guess. I agree with your prediction that things will get confusing and expensive, then a shakedown. I would bet it will still be confusing and expensive even after a shakedown (as expensive as possible without being intolerable to most people).
That said, there have been some really great things created lately, that probably wouldn't have been made in the past. Unfortunate Events is one (it was tried a couple times), and Planet Earth, and Wild, Wild Country. Online streaming has made it possible to find niche audiences for things that wouldn't have been made before.
I don't know what kind of stuff you like to watch, but Netflix has also been bringing Japanese stuff, and Series of Unfortunate Events turned out to be surprisingly good.
Everyone is already using C++ when they need efficiency, even Google. Tensorflow is C++ then they use python for the times when efficiency doesn't matter.
Yeah. A lot of times the problem isn't a person's analytical thinking, it's their information gathering skills. If the only thing a person can find is pro-flat-earth information, then they're likely to start believing it.
I don't think democracy relies on people being rational. Government isn't about rationality in a lot of aspects, it's about desires. Should we pave the road, or not? Should we have a post office?
Democracy is a way to change governments without violence, which happens with kings. Don't make your expectations too high.
Kind of ridiculous that these phones won't let you uninstall apps. I'd kind of like to remove stuff from the "Swipe from top" menu, too.
Hint: I did it three years ago, and our latency was super low and our hosting costs were cheap. Had fewer memory issues than the JavaScript programmers, too. It's not that Spring is easier or harder, it's that if you've never learned assembly, you have no fucking clue what your computer is doing. Great, you memorized a lot of functions, but could you write it Spring yourself? If not, you are a slave to library writers, and when they decide to hurt you, you get hurt.
I think the article is bullshit and their methodology sucks, but Triple byte is a convenient way to screen a lot of companies quickly if you're looking for a new job. (Along those lines, companies like LinkedIn are offering $250k total compensation to new hires these days, although not entry level).
I can't remember ever having to actually reverse a string in real life.
Btw if your point was that you think Erlang has better concurrency than C#, you should have just said that. You migh
Btw if your point was that you think Erlang has better concurrency than C#, you should have just said that. You might be right.
The link you gave doesn't define the difference between concurrency and parallelism. I'm not sure you read it.
Stop saying stupid things and say what the difference is between parallelism and concurrency. Concurrency is really nice in Erlang but I was more attracted by its stability.
You're full of bullshit. If you knew the difference you would have said it, instead you're wasting words. Wasted words is the definition of bullshit.
Lisp, Erlang, Haskell. Most with Erlang, least with Haskell. Some people call Python a functional programming language, but it's not really.
Yeah. Different people have different definitions and from the point of view of the programmer it doesn't really matter if they are happening at the same time or not.
Oh interesting, I didn't know you can call Go from Python now.
I'm not convinced that there is a meaningful difference between concurrency and parallelism.
I'm going to avoid that.
What exactly is "them?'
Good choice, the Dell XPS has weak body construction.
That's an extremely reasonable response.
you have never done any serious work in a functional language or any serious parallelism.
I've done both.
Storage isn't an issue, so why not have some pre-Code 1930s films
Yeah they could definitely do that.
When the 'modern' TV era arrived, I spent a lot of time binging on various series, but after a while I got over it. They didn't attract me the way they used to, it suddenly became a game of critiquing the writers, figuring out what they were trying to do, instead of enjoying and being swept away by a story. So now I don't watch TV or Netflix or Hulu much. A lot of the content I can just see where it's going, getting a story dribbled out one plot element per episode, eventually leading nowhere.
I wonder if the public in general is going to do the same, or people will just go along with it. Most likely the media companies will keep trying different stuff until they find a formula that works, I guess. I agree with your prediction that things will get confusing and expensive, then a shakedown. I would bet it will still be confusing and expensive even after a shakedown (as expensive as possible without being intolerable to most people).
That said, there have been some really great things created lately, that probably wouldn't have been made in the past. Unfortunate Events is one (it was tried a couple times), and Planet Earth, and Wild, Wild Country. Online streaming has made it possible to find niche audiences for things that wouldn't have been made before.
I don't know what kind of stuff you like to watch, but Netflix has also been bringing Japanese stuff, and Series of Unfortunate Events turned out to be surprisingly good.
Everyone is already using C++ when they need efficiency, even Google. Tensorflow is C++ then they use python for the times when efficiency doesn't matter.
Functional is the easiest code for parallel processing.
Nah, C# with they yield style of automatically doing multi-threading is the easiest.
Why do you think it has been making such a come back?
It hasn't. Some of the nice functionality has been imported into Java, but hardly anyone is talking about immutability.
but probably you will have tools to enforce them.
That is a very probably firm endorsement.
Yeah. A lot of times the problem isn't a person's analytical thinking, it's their information gathering skills. If the only thing a person can find is pro-flat-earth information, then they're likely to start believing it.
I don't think democracy relies on people being rational. Government isn't about rationality in a lot of aspects, it's about desires. Should we pave the road, or not? Should we have a post office?
Democracy is a way to change governments without violence, which happens with kings. Don't make your expectations too high.