No, They were not identified with lightning speed after the images were released of the suspects. They were identified after they hijacked a car, told the passenger they were responsible for the bombings, let the passenger go, one of them was killed in a shootout and they police finger printed him. Even those people that saw the surviving suspect on a daily basis failed to identify him from the picture.
I'd say that gathering of images from the crowds helped the police find the images of the bombers. But the crowds themselves, were actually pretty useless after that, unless you call the hijacked man or the boat owners 911 calls "crowd sourcing".
Sadly, most people are not like you. Furthermore crazy as all hell people picked up on redit and 4chan treating them as valid sources, and propagated it as truth over the airways (Glen Beck, Alex Jones, ect). The more wrong information there is, the more conspiracy theories will spring up from the insane.
So Java EE, and hence an Architect, are required for applications with complex requirements.
I have to admit, the Enterprise is very foreign to me. I've always heard about things required "for Enterprise", but the concept is pretty nebulous. I used to mean that meant scaling only. Look at what modern large internet companies have achieved on a shoe string budget and with open source, I doubt that any of them have any "Enterprise" software at their core. So, I think there must be more to "Enterprise" applications that I don't understand.
Actually, it does all of that * for my area*. I kind of doubt you'd get as accurate data from smart phones. Not every one has one with gps turned on, so your really measuring traffic of people who have smart phones. The highway could be congested, but still show its wide open. I'm really suprised that anyone would rely solely on smartphone gps data.
Oh, that's a common mistake. This obviously isn't the Streisand effect, but the closely related Streissand effect.
The Streisand effect is when you have something that you really do want to keep private, but in your zealous quest to do so it becomes more public much to your chagrin.
The Streissand effect is when you have something you don't really care if it stays private and make a zealous quest to keep it quiet, making it look like a Streisand effect, when the intention was to try to set a precedent that could be used in he future to encourage people to not try to make the other really private stuff, the stuff you *really* want to keep private, public for fear of your reaction.
I hate to break it to you, but *no one* has called PC's microcomputers since 1991. People are calling very small computers minicomputers, even though that name used to mean a computer that was housed in one cabinet. Time changes, terminology gets reused. Adapt for the sake of your own sanity.
Why do we have to choose. You can be both admirable and criminal. One is a legal definition, and the other an opinion on the man's morality. There are people who aren't stuck in second grade morality that know morality can be a complex determination that can vary from one person to the next.
No, Its not 3.25 per Kilowatt hour. They paid 3.25 for the half hour. The amount of charge transferred is not known. It could be 3.25 per kilowatt hour, but there is not enough information to state that.
He's a dice empolyee, so yes, obviously. The goal is to make an article as techy sounding as possible, but spend as little time as possible writing it.
I don't know. If I ever become a billionaire CEO, I'm getting lackies to do the 24/7 thing. I need time to "stratergize" how to "unificate" our "meta-telleigence" over games of macro-mini-golf. If my life is hectic,then I've failed as a billionaire CEO.
Have you ever heard of the land of the midnight sun? The number of daylight hours changes dramatically at high lattitudes, such a system would not be workable. With such variable light, your system woudl redifne the definition of hour through out the year. In the artic circle, an hour would range from 1 day to an infatesimally small amount. Doing buisness with any would be insane. Arranging for internatinal meetings and events would not work without detailed knowledge of the sun's position at that given point. It would be fairly chaotic.
I thought you were going to propose something sensible for a second, like only using UTC everywhere at all times of the year.
I disagree. Its always funny, insightful and thought provoking. Arthur C Clarke was one of the best writers of the 20th century. We could stand to quote him more often. This is slashdot. Trust me, nothing here is any more insightful than that.
Has anyone really cared about karma since 2002 or so? I mean, it was kinda cool back when it was an ever increasing number, but I've just had excellent since then.
I'm posting it because I found it ironic. You just shouldn't trust a marketing campaign to be legally binding forever. They don't have to notify any users of a change in marketing campaign, so tomorrow they could turn around and just silently scan your email. Furthermore, they might have been doing it *before* the marketing campaign. We just don't know.
I just know that its a stupid series of ads that I'd like to vanish along with all other stupid tech ads ( including the stupid glee-esque surface ads).
Blah, I despise javadoc. For most projects, you just end up with the automatically generated doc with pointless comments. Plus, with deep object hierarchy it ends up being a lot of clicking to finally find the definition of the method you really need to know about.
Not surprised. This is one of the things that separates really bad developers form okay ones. The ability to research a problem. There are many cases of stack overflow answers not being comprehensive. Often I've found developers arguing that there is a bug in another section of the code, due to a stack overflow answer. Consulting the original documentation would have revealed the subtle edge case that explains the behavior.
No, They were not identified with lightning speed after the images were released of the suspects. They were identified after they hijacked a car, told the passenger they were responsible for the bombings, let the passenger go, one of them was killed in a shootout and they police finger printed him. Even those people that saw the surviving suspect on a daily basis failed to identify him from the picture.
I'd say that gathering of images from the crowds helped the police find the images of the bombers. But the crowds themselves, were actually pretty useless after that, unless you call the hijacked man or the boat owners 911 calls "crowd sourcing".
Sadly, most people are not like you. Furthermore crazy as all hell people picked up on redit and 4chan treating them as valid sources, and propagated it as truth over the airways (Glen Beck, Alex Jones, ect). The more wrong information there is, the more conspiracy theories will spring up from the insane.
That's what the cynic in me thinks. However,I still have this slim hope that some people actually have some higher reasons for all the infrastructure.
So Java EE, and hence an Architect, are required for applications with complex requirements.
I have to admit, the Enterprise is very foreign to me. I've always heard about things required "for Enterprise", but the concept is pretty nebulous. I used to mean that meant scaling only. Look at what modern large internet companies have achieved on a shoe string budget and with open source, I doubt that any of them have any "Enterprise" software at their core. So, I think there must be more to "Enterprise" applications that I don't understand.
If you wouldn't mind indulging my curiosity, what metrics would you look at to determine "how big" an application is? Cost can't be the sole factor.
Actually, it does all of that * for my area*. I kind of doubt you'd get as accurate data from smart phones. Not every one has one with gps turned on, so your really measuring traffic of people who have smart phones. The highway could be congested, but still show its wide open. I'm really suprised that anyone would rely solely on smartphone gps data.
In my area, there is already a sensor network built into the roads. No need for GPS sharing.
Oh, that's a common mistake. This obviously isn't the Streisand effect, but the closely related Streissand effect.
The Streisand effect is when you have something that you really do want to keep private, but in your zealous quest to do so it becomes more public much to your chagrin.
The Streissand effect is when you have something you don't really care if it stays private and make a zealous quest to keep it quiet, making it look like a Streisand effect, when the intention was to try to set a precedent that could be used in he future to encourage people to not try to make the other really private stuff, the stuff you *really* want to keep private, public for fear of your reaction.
Well, I couldn't care more about your off beet phrasing.
http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/01/surface-pro-disk-space-to-fall-a-long-way-short-of-what-youd-expect/
A stock surface 64 pro should only have ~ 23 Gb left
I hate to break it to you, but *no one* has called PC's microcomputers since 1991. People are calling very small computers minicomputers, even though that name used to mean a computer that was housed in one cabinet. Time changes, terminology gets reused. Adapt for the sake of your own sanity.
Why do we have to choose. You can be both admirable and criminal. One is a legal definition, and the other an opinion on the man's morality. There are people who aren't stuck in second grade morality that know morality can be a complex determination that can vary from one person to the next.
I didn't say that it was. I was simply implying that a similar charge to reckless homicide could apply if an actual shooting had taken place.
I was on a jury that convicted a man of reckless homicide after a street race ended up in a horrible crash.
So yeah if someone had been shot then a similar charge should apply.
No, Its not 3.25 per Kilowatt hour. They paid 3.25 for the half hour. The amount of charge transferred is not known. It could be 3.25 per kilowatt hour, but there is not enough information to state that.
Select KDE programs do work. KDE Plasma Desktop does not work. Its kind of sad, but no one really stepped up to do it. KDE3 was working at some point.
Being able to not run Unity is an advantage for Ubuntu?
Its the only Operating system that allows you to choose it.
He's a dice empolyee, so yes, obviously. The goal is to make an article as techy sounding as possible, but spend as little time as possible writing it.
Twelve words:
Thin clients of the future are as powerful as thick clients today.
I don't know. If I ever become a billionaire CEO, I'm getting lackies to do the 24/7 thing. I need time to "stratergize" how to "unificate" our "meta-telleigence" over games of macro-mini-golf. If my life is hectic,then I've failed as a billionaire CEO.
Have you ever heard of the land of the midnight sun? The number of daylight hours changes dramatically at high lattitudes, such a system would not be workable. With such variable light, your system woudl redifne the definition of hour through out the year. In the artic circle, an hour would range from 1 day to an infatesimally small amount. Doing buisness with any would be insane. Arranging for internatinal meetings and events would not work without detailed knowledge of the sun's position at that given point. It would be fairly chaotic.
I thought you were going to propose something sensible for a second, like only using UTC everywhere at all times of the year.
I disagree. Its always funny, insightful and thought provoking. Arthur C Clarke was one of the best writers of the 20th century. We could stand to quote him more often. This is slashdot. Trust me, nothing here is any more insightful than that.
Has anyone really cared about karma since 2002 or so? I mean, it was kinda cool back when it was an ever increasing number, but I've just had excellent since then.
I'm posting it because I found it ironic. You just shouldn't trust a marketing campaign to be legally binding forever. They don't have to notify any users of a change in marketing campaign, so tomorrow they could turn around and just silently scan your email. Furthermore, they might have been doing it *before* the marketing campaign. We just don't know.
I just know that its a stupid series of ads that I'd like to vanish along with all other stupid tech ads ( including the stupid glee-esque surface ads).
Blah, I despise javadoc. For most projects, you just end up with the automatically generated doc with pointless comments. Plus, with deep object hierarchy it ends up being a lot of clicking to finally find the definition of the method you really need to know about.
Not surprised. This is one of the things that separates really bad developers form okay ones. The ability to research a problem. There are many cases of stack overflow answers not being comprehensive. Often I've found developers arguing that there is a bug in another section of the code, due to a stack overflow answer. Consulting the original documentation would have revealed the subtle edge case that explains the behavior.