This language has a pretty good overview of a process that works. Unfortunately his process was invented living in a country, where you are forced to practice it every day. When you are living in a country that doesn't speak whatever language you are trying to learn, the process has to change. The best process I've found so far that works in that situation is to read through a lot of reading material. That gives you a reasonable substitute exposure. I don't think I have a good answer for the best way.
Five minutes a day, that's all it takes.
Maybe not, but I try to spend a few minutes a day at least on a language, so that way I'm always making progress forward, even if it's slow......
It will be an encrypted version stored on the disk, and only can be unencrypted using the netflix app. When Netflix decides, the decryption key will expire, and thus you will no longer be able to watch the movie.
I don't know about Portugal, but I'd much rather live in England than in Spain (though I like the language). When I learned Spanish, I thought it would help me find a job, because so many Americans speak Spanish now. Nope. It has been the most completely utterly useless skill for me. Unless you're working in the service sector or something, it doesn't help.
My understanding is that once they start the EU Article 50 process, it can't be reversed (although it might take 2 years for the process to complete). They haven't started that yet, but plan on starting it soon.
To add to that, if you want to set up automatic payments, most banks can set it up for you, so the send the money (instead of the company removing it). They can send you an alert several days before they send the money, So you can stop it if you've forgotten. They can even send a check if the company hasn't enabled online payments.
This sort of thing happens all the time. There are some bugs that companies just don't feel motivated to debug.
Linux is trademarked. Plenty of non-profits have trademarks. Because of all that, I don't think you need to be having "financial things" going on in order to get a trademark.
I don't know how popular it is in terms of numbers, but in terms of hype it's the top of the heap.
The Rust team has an organization (Mozilla) behind them helping to drive things forward. I haven't heard of many companies adopting it (except maybe on a side/experimental project by one developer) but people are talking about replacing the entire unix-land with it because it's presumably safer.
Reports are that Go works great in production. The biggest reason I see that people use Rust instead is that Go is a garbage-collection based language. Also some people are turned off by the lack of inheritance, but those people probably aren't C programmers.
At this point, what's missing?
"IF you trust the language to prevent you from making mistakes, you're going to have mistakes all over your code. Because no language can do that."
What happens when one of these collapses under the insanity of its economic idealism and the population takes refuge on the other?
To some degree that's already happening in California, as lower classes flee the high cost of living and move elsewhere.
Show me a licensed plumbers, mechanics, electricians, carpenters, crane operators, much more without a job and I'll find them a job within a day.
Their salaries have been pulled down by immigrants who are willing to work cheaper. Carpenters don't make all that much in America tbh
If "losing the 22 year old entrepreneur" segment is the worse thing that happens, I guess the UK will be ok.
This language has a pretty good overview of a process that works. Unfortunately his process was invented living in a country, where you are forced to practice it every day. When you are living in a country that doesn't speak whatever language you are trying to learn, the process has to change. The best process I've found so far that works in that situation is to read through a lot of reading material. That gives you a reasonable substitute exposure. I don't think I have a good answer for the best way.
Do you have a special concept?
Don't give up. Slow and steady wins the race, you can't learn a language in a day.
Git was kind of designed (partly) to solve the backup problem......
Mirroring is not backup, not at all.
Yeah, they were lucky that these files only got encrypted, which means they could get them back.
Five minutes a day, that's all it takes.
Maybe not, but I try to spend a few minutes a day at least on a language, so that way I'm always making progress forward, even if it's slow......
It will be an encrypted version stored on the disk, and only can be unencrypted using the netflix app. When Netflix decides, the decryption key will expire, and thus you will no longer be able to watch the movie.
It seems to be selling relatively well, actually. I know a few people who got one instead of a laptop, and are happy with it.
I don't know about Portugal, but I'd much rather live in England than in Spain (though I like the language). When I learned Spanish, I thought it would help me find a job, because so many Americans speak Spanish now. Nope. It has been the most completely utterly useless skill for me. Unless you're working in the service sector or something, it doesn't help.
I don't really think of the UK as being "on its knees"
The UK was imho wrecked by the Falkland war. It was just to costly.
Seriously?
One thing's for sure, Cameron will go down as one of the worst prime ministers in history.
My understanding is that once they start the EU Article 50 process, it can't be reversed (although it might take 2 years for the process to complete). They haven't started that yet, but plan on starting it soon.
I can't tell if you're attempting to make a joke
Really?
True, voters are not always rational (Iraq cough),
You had to look at Iraq to give an example of irrationality? You couldn't look at our remaining candidates here in the US?
Here for example. The search term I used was "german inflation fear"
To add to that, if you want to set up automatic payments, most banks can set it up for you, so the send the money (instead of the company removing it). They can send you an alert several days before they send the money, So you can stop it if you've forgotten. They can even send a check if the company hasn't enabled online payments.
This sort of thing happens all the time. There are some bugs that companies just don't feel motivated to debug.
Linux is trademarked. Plenty of non-profits have trademarks. Because of all that, I don't think you need to be having "financial things" going on in order to get a trademark.
I don't know how popular it is in terms of numbers, but in terms of hype it's the top of the heap.
The Rust team has an organization (Mozilla) behind them helping to drive things forward. I haven't heard of many companies adopting it (except maybe on a side/experimental project by one developer) but people are talking about replacing the entire unix-land with it because it's presumably safer.
Reports are that Go works great in production. The biggest reason I see that people use Rust instead is that Go is a garbage-collection based language. Also some people are turned off by the lack of inheritance, but those people probably aren't C programmers.
I always thought of D (and also now, Rust) as replacements for C++, not for C. Totally different purposes.
And now D has missed the "type" wave that is the big hype right now.