Then you read the f***ing error, and fix the f***ing code.
You completely missed his point.
The question was, "What if the original code can no long be used?". You can modify the code and run a different experiment, but you are not reproducing the original.
Actually, we don't know if habitable planets are rare.
It depends on what you mean by "rare". Habitable planets that are hundreds, thousands, or millions of light years apart are rare on the scale of living organisms.
This "boom" is really just another observation of the scramble to grab federal subsidies before they dry up next year. Once the full cost of PV is carried by the owners the economics will change.
Banks are required to have insurance protecting a specific percentage of deposited wealth.
Do you advocate sending bank executives to jail if some robs the bank? But you do advocate sending a company's executives to jail if a hacker steals personal information. What's the difference?
All this shows is a count of github projects by language. I expect that the vast majority of those projects were created by people trying to learn a language by working through tutorials. It would be more useful to display languages by number of downloads or something like that, so we could see what languages are actually being "used" rather than what languages self-taught programmer wannabes are trying to learn.
Outside of a few high tech corridors, the number of Asian students in US primary schools if pretty small. I also suspect that a large percentage of Google's Asian employees grew up in Asia.
the main reason given by a "comprehensive but not representative" sample of 9,693 K-12 principals and 1,865 school district superintendents in the U.S. for their schools not offering computer science "is the limited time they have to devote to classes that are not tied to testing requirements."
So what the survey found is that school administrators are blaming No Child Left Behind, because instead of giving the students a good education and letting the test scores reflect that, they're trying to game the system by teaching to the test. It would be nice if someone could come up with a better way to measure a student's progress. But then the administrators would spend their time figuring out how to game that measure anyway.
it looks like the managers of the fund are doing pretty well.
In a year when the S&P was up over 15% they did well but not exceptional. Yale would have gotten a better net return by just putting the cash in indexed mutual funds; in the long run, almost every investor does better that way instead of going with "actively managed" funds where the manager collects a huge salary in years when the market is up and doesn't say anything in years when the market is down.
It's very simple to prove a student's program consisting of a few modules and a couple hundred lines of code. Expand that out to hundreds of programmers, thousands of modules and tens of millions of lines of code and it's not so simple anymore.
In the early 90's a coworker loaned me a handful of 1.44MB floppies; I think there were thirteen of them. I had to reformat the hard drive that was running Windows 3.1 and install both OSs from diskettes. I don't miss those days.
Before that they announced PL/1, the First and soon to be the Only Programming Language. Except it flopped, and never replaced any of the other programming languages in vogue at the time.
There are some on the fringe. But one could say the same about the Democrats (I hope you don't consider Hillary and Sanders main stream).
Trump is only popular with Democrats who say they're Republicans when they respond to a poll. Their only hope for the White House this time is to get him to run against Clinton, but I don't expect either to get the nomination
I'll save about $1,400 a year in electricity with such a system.
That puts me at an even 20 year payback period.
You're payback is much longer than that unless you have the $28K stuffed in a mattress. Put your money in a mutual fund and the payback is never, even with the subsidies. Same thing if you have to borrow the $28K (unless you can find someone to loan you the money interest free).
I think what OP meant is that life isn't a bowl of cherries. You can work at a job you don't like if it pays well, or you can look for an alternative
What qualifies as an alternative depends on your political philosophy:
1) Quit the job you have and find another (or start your own company)
2) Try to change your work conditions by negotiating with your employer
3) Force change by forming a union and giving the employer an ultimatum
4) Force change by overthrowing the government and taking control of all means of production
5) Something else...
That only describes the lunatic fringe, kind of like saying all Democrats were out on Wall Street blocking traffic.
The other 95% of Republicans are as close to the center as most Democrats, albeit fiscally a bit more conservative, socially not quite as enthusiastic about entitlement programs, and are open to discussions of responsible energy policy.
Then you read the f***ing error, and fix the f***ing code.
You completely missed his point.
The question was, "What if the original code can no long be used?". You can modify the code and run a different experiment, but you are not reproducing the original.
Actually, we don't know if habitable planets are rare.
It depends on what you mean by "rare". Habitable planets that are hundreds, thousands, or millions of light years apart are rare on the scale of living organisms.
What he said
This "boom" is really just another observation of the scramble to grab federal subsidies before they dry up next year. Once the full cost of PV is carried by the owners the economics will change.
The problem is output per area.
That's only a problem for solar. Most of the land under a turbine can still be used for agriculture.
As for predictable, wind in Texas is very predictable and available far more than sunshine.
systemd is the future. Instead of getting your panties in a bunch, accept it and get on with your life.
There's no practical way to define "bad practices". Better is to treat data theft the same as any other theft; punish the thief.
Banks are required to have insurance protecting a specific percentage of deposited wealth.
Do you advocate sending bank executives to jail if some robs the bank? But you do advocate sending a company's executives to jail if a hacker steals personal information. What's the difference?
All this shows is a count of github projects by language. I expect that the vast majority of those projects were created by people trying to learn a language by working through tutorials. It would be more useful to display languages by number of downloads or something like that, so we could see what languages are actually being "used" rather than what languages self-taught programmer wannabes are trying to learn.
Outside of a few high tech corridors, the number of Asian students in US primary schools if pretty small. I also suspect that a large percentage of Google's Asian employees grew up in Asia.
the main reason given by a "comprehensive but not representative" sample of 9,693 K-12 principals and 1,865 school district superintendents in the U.S. for their schools not offering computer science "is the limited time they have to devote to classes that are not tied to testing requirements."
So what the survey found is that school administrators are blaming No Child Left Behind, because instead of giving the students a good education and letting the test scores reflect that, they're trying to game the system by teaching to the test. It would be nice if someone could come up with a better way to measure a student's progress. But then the administrators would spend their time figuring out how to game that measure anyway.
I can't mod you up, but that's how I see it. Still welfare, but a more efficient way of transferring the money.
while they produced a half billion dollars more net of their fees
They rode the rising tide of the market. Their fees ate up any extra gain that came from their management.
it looks like the managers of the fund are doing pretty well.
In a year when the S&P was up over 15% they did well but not exceptional. Yale would have gotten a better net return by just putting the cash in indexed mutual funds; in the long run, almost every investor does better that way instead of going with "actively managed" funds where the manager collects a huge salary in years when the market is up and doesn't say anything in years when the market is down.
Isn't this usually called welfare? Apparently "basic income" is the new politically correct term for it.
It's very simple to prove a student's program consisting of a few modules and a couple hundred lines of code. Expand that out to hundreds of programmers, thousands of modules and tens of millions of lines of code and it's not so simple anymore.
The civilian aircraft control system has been chronically underfunded for decades, since Reagan fired PATCO.
Reagan initiated and appropriately funded a complete overhaul of the control system.
The illegal strike by the air traffic controllers is irrelevant.
In the early 90's a coworker loaned me a handful of 1.44MB floppies; I think there were thirteen of them. I had to reformat the hard drive that was running Windows 3.1 and install both OSs from diskettes. I don't miss those days.
Before that they announced PL/1, the First and soon to be the Only Programming Language. Except it flopped, and never replaced any of the other programming languages in vogue at the time.
If that's true he has some explaining to do.
There are some on the fringe. But one could say the same about the Democrats (I hope you don't consider Hillary and Sanders main stream).
Trump is only popular with Democrats who say they're Republicans when they respond to a poll. Their only hope for the White House this time is to get him to run against Clinton, but I don't expect either to get the nomination
I'll save about $1,400 a year in electricity with such a system.
That puts me at an even 20 year payback period.
You're payback is much longer than that unless you have the $28K stuffed in a mattress. Put your money in a mutual fund and the payback is never, even with the subsidies. Same thing if you have to borrow the $28K (unless you can find someone to loan you the money interest free).
I think what OP meant is that life isn't a bowl of cherries. You can work at a job you don't like if it pays well, or you can look for an alternative
What qualifies as an alternative depends on your political philosophy:
1) Quit the job you have and find another (or start your own company)
2) Try to change your work conditions by negotiating with your employer
3) Force change by forming a union and giving the employer an ultimatum
4) Force change by overthrowing the government and taking control of all means of production
5) Something else...
Basically, there's two kinds of Republicans:...
That only describes the lunatic fringe, kind of like saying all Democrats were out on Wall Street blocking traffic.
The other 95% of Republicans are as close to the center as most Democrats, albeit fiscally a bit more conservative, socially not quite as enthusiastic about entitlement programs, and are open to discussions of responsible energy policy.
mainframe servers that only run on Linux.
Something about that quote seems backwards to me. Can I run that server on a raspberry pi running Linux?
a non-profit foundation dedicated to corporate responsibility, plans to bring legal action against Soylent
What part of that is confusing you?