The state doesn't have any authority over airspace. It is strictly reserved to the feds, as in FAA. No state law that conflicts with federal law is valid.
It seems pretty clear that your concept of competence is whether a developer has a question that can stump another. Therefore the test should be whether your interviewee has a question *you* don't have the answer to, not vice versa. As for encryption the test for expertise is whether a developer who is not a security specialist realizes that they don't know nearly enough to do it correctly and unless they've worked on that technology for years they're gonna do it wrong (and even the folks who've done it for years cannot escape making mistakes).
OCaml has been on the JVM for a long while ( http://www.ocamljava.org/ ). Although the OSS 1.x version did go closed there is a new 2.0 version that is OSS again.
Kawa was one of the earliest LISPs for the JVM and has been used by plenty of folks for almost two decades. Per invented (although I don't think patented) many of the techniques folks have been using (or rediscovering) for other languages targeting the JVM.
You don't need a lawyer for small claims, so not being one isn't a big problem. Filing the claim will also get the attention of some higher ups that the tech support tree will block you from.
The notion of security for a device for which someone has JTAG access is a joke, and I'm not being sarcastic. This article is purely trolling by putting "China" in the title. There is no chip of meaningful complexity made anywhere in the world that is safe from complete pwnage if JTAG access is available.
Even if/when someone took the trouble to try and make sure there is no direct access to the key registers via JTAG, I guarantee that there are indirect means to read them. The fact that JTAG access to state elements is often added at synthesis from RTL means the functional designers often have no idea what can or can't be done via the JTAG for a particular chip. Absolutely no subterfuge needs to be imagined for manufacturer-generated JTAG elements to do arbitrary things besides the tiny subset they actually use which is testing.
But back to my original point. If you've got JTAG access then there are any number of timing and/or RFI means that can be combined to read (and potentially write) any bit anywhere on the chip. There is no such thing as electronic security without physical security first.
Try and find a modern digital IC of any size without a backdoor! It's called JTAG. Everyone has to design them in, they've not secrets. That's how the manufacturer tests each chip to see if it works or not. Often used in system development as well.
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say. Not to mention the many virtual worlds and many MPORPGs that preceded WoW. Very weird.
But not really so weird when you consider Oracle thinks they have billions worth of damages from Android when OpenJDK is GPL.
All it takes for a lawsuit is a lawyer who figures he can make a buck and plaintiff crazy enough to pay.
Exactly how far back does your memory go? For decades while Microsoft held power over all computers that mattered the press was overwhelming pro-M$. A big part of that was of course because they poured an enormous amount of money into the publishers' coffers. Even whole publishers owed their existence to M$ and never would be heard a discouraging word (ever heard of Ziff-Davis?). Then there was this little thing of being convicted of illegal antitrust market manipulation and a few folks woke up to the idea that it is possible that not everything M$ puts out smells all that sweet.
There are many digital annotation systems with distribution means prior to 2005.
Just for a example is the very general-purpose Annotea RDF vocabulary and support implemented in the W3C Amaya web browser. 2001
http://www.w3.org/2001/Annotea/
Import and distribution jobs are every bit as American as textile manufacturing jobs. I can tell you what won't create any jobs, spending another $14,000 on an "investigation". The unemployed would have a better chance at getting jobs with another 6,000 capes.
The officials are calling for an investigation of what? They having trouble understanding why the unemployment agency folks are grasping at straws? If that's the case then the folks that need to get investigated and fired are the "officials".
I had to wonder if my alter ego was posting this question, but I knew it couldn't be me since because I'd been out of school for 30 years before returning last fall. Statistics is now a required course for CS at my school and took it first thing (the academic adviser signed me up) and I did struggle a bit because I couldn't follow the proofs involving calculus without help, but I still got an A (we didn't have to know the proofs for the exams). But when I saw the text (Pattern Recognition by Bishop) for the Machine Learning & Data Mining class the next quarter I knew I had to seriously (re)learn some calculus. I looked through a number of books and when I found Calculus for Dummies by Mark Ryan I knew I'd found exactly what I needed, the workbook is helpful too but not essential. Don't bother with Calculus II for Dummies though, it just an ordinary (which is to say useless for the non-naturals) calculus text (although I did pick up PDE from it in a brief look through).
And as it happens, the rules on AP Calculus transfer have also changed and I'm probably gonna wind up taking first year calculus anyhow, although pretty much too late for it to do me much good (it would have been helpful to do that before those classes I mention above). I will probably take it online from a community college rather than at the university though, which is what I'm also doing for the foreign language requirement. Thirty years ago the university didn't make CS majors take a foreign language reasoning that computer languages were foreign. We knew that was a joke then, of course the joke on me is that they fixed it in the interim.
For free online resources, the Kahn Academy videos are pretty good if that form works for you.
http://khanacademy.org/'
Don't listen to all the noise on in this thread. You're totally The Man for braving the slings and arrows in returning to school. It's actually pretty cool in a lot of ways. Among other things you get treated with a rather large measure of respect as a result of being old(er). That is probably on account of the kids thinking you're likely to be a professor or at least a grad student.
This very issue (the soon-to-be-reality of computer systems that can and do claim copyright on their output) is why I called on the authors of GPL v3 to include provision for a "Greater GPL". They summarily dismissed the proposal and said such application of copyright is impossible. They were and are quite wrong about that.
http://pagesmiths.com/blog/C1602834558/E1763876253/index.html
Whatever Phipps' experience (of which I have no knowledge), he clearly doesn't comprehend Java security.
The whole key to safe code in networked environments is the use of security policies. That includes, in addition to "fine grained" access control over OS operations, the ability to restrict access to classes in the classloader mechanism.
This is the same stuff that happens whether you're doing applets in a web browser or a servlet in a web application container (including Sun's Glassfish).
Your ideas are being stolen. Not only don't tell anyone what they are, don't even think about them. Hidden in the walls of your dorm are dream snatchers which are recording and patenting every thought you have.
Don't think this is a joke or you will regret not taking this extremely important advice.
The prospect of metaprogramming tools raises threats and opportunities for OSS. The biggest threat is that they could be used (legally or not) to strip copyright from OSS. On the plus side, innovation in the next version of the GPL could solve the patent morass by adding a "patent shredder" to "copyleft". I propose the introduction of a "Greater GPL" in GPL Version 3 to address these issues. http://www.pagesmiths.com/category-ip.html
Googling on relevant keywords like:
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22open+source%22+n ih+grant+proposal&btnG=Google+Search&hl=en&lr=&ie= UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
Turns up nice things. Here's the first hit:
http://era.nih.gov/areas/com/SBIR_Awarded.pdf
And there are other interesting pages like:
http://informatics.regenstrief.org/funding
Happy fund hunting!
How can this ban be justified as in any way based on safety? There is no point in comparing them to bicycles and scooters. They are directly equivalent to motorized wheelchairs and have obvious application for those who currently use walkers.
For those concerned about weight and speed, the popular Rascal three wheeler is 250 pounds with a top speed of 5 mph, or an Arrow weighs 170 pounds less batteries and goes 8 mph.
The state doesn't have any authority over airspace. It is strictly reserved to the feds, as in FAA. No state law that conflicts with federal law is valid.
It seems pretty clear that your concept of competence is whether a developer has a question that can stump another. Therefore the test should be whether your interviewee has a question *you* don't have the answer to, not vice versa. As for encryption the test for expertise is whether a developer who is not a security specialist realizes that they don't know nearly enough to do it correctly and unless they've worked on that technology for years they're gonna do it wrong (and even the folks who've done it for years cannot escape making mistakes).
OCaml has been on the JVM for a long while ( http://www.ocamljava.org/ ). Although the OSS 1.x version did go closed there is a new 2.0 version that is OSS again. Kawa was one of the earliest LISPs for the JVM and has been used by plenty of folks for almost two decades. Per invented (although I don't think patented) many of the techniques folks have been using (or rediscovering) for other languages targeting the JVM.
The only people fooled by Goostman's PR BS are the press and their gullible readers.
You don't need a lawyer for small claims, so not being one isn't a big problem. Filing the claim will also get the attention of some higher ups that the tech support tree will block you from.
The notion of security for a device for which someone has JTAG access is a joke, and I'm not being sarcastic. This article is purely trolling by putting "China" in the title. There is no chip of meaningful complexity made anywhere in the world that is safe from complete pwnage if JTAG access is available. Even if/when someone took the trouble to try and make sure there is no direct access to the key registers via JTAG, I guarantee that there are indirect means to read them. The fact that JTAG access to state elements is often added at synthesis from RTL means the functional designers often have no idea what can or can't be done via the JTAG for a particular chip. Absolutely no subterfuge needs to be imagined for manufacturer-generated JTAG elements to do arbitrary things besides the tiny subset they actually use which is testing. But back to my original point. If you've got JTAG access then there are any number of timing and/or RFI means that can be combined to read (and potentially write) any bit anywhere on the chip. There is no such thing as electronic security without physical security first.
Try and find a modern digital IC of any size without a backdoor! It's called JTAG. Everyone has to design them in, they've not secrets. That's how the manufacturer tests each chip to see if it works or not. Often used in system development as well.
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say. Not to mention the many virtual worlds and many MPORPGs that preceded WoW. Very weird. But not really so weird when you consider Oracle thinks they have billions worth of damages from Android when OpenJDK is GPL. All it takes for a lawsuit is a lawyer who figures he can make a buck and plaintiff crazy enough to pay.
Exactly how far back does your memory go? For decades while Microsoft held power over all computers that mattered the press was overwhelming pro-M$. A big part of that was of course because they poured an enormous amount of money into the publishers' coffers. Even whole publishers owed their existence to M$ and never would be heard a discouraging word (ever heard of Ziff-Davis?). Then there was this little thing of being convicted of illegal antitrust market manipulation and a few folks woke up to the idea that it is possible that not everything M$ puts out smells all that sweet.
There are many digital annotation systems with distribution means prior to 2005. Just for a example is the very general-purpose Annotea RDF vocabulary and support implemented in the W3C Amaya web browser. 2001 http://www.w3.org/2001/Annotea/
So where is the science to support the academics' rant?
Import and distribution jobs are every bit as American as textile manufacturing jobs. I can tell you what won't create any jobs, spending another $14,000 on an "investigation". The unemployed would have a better chance at getting jobs with another 6,000 capes.
The officials are calling for an investigation of what? They having trouble understanding why the unemployment agency folks are grasping at straws? If that's the case then the folks that need to get investigated and fired are the "officials".
I had to wonder if my alter ego was posting this question, but I knew it couldn't be me since because I'd been out of school for 30 years before returning last fall. Statistics is now a required course for CS at my school and took it first thing (the academic adviser signed me up) and I did struggle a bit because I couldn't follow the proofs involving calculus without help, but I still got an A (we didn't have to know the proofs for the exams). But when I saw the text (Pattern Recognition by Bishop) for the Machine Learning & Data Mining class the next quarter I knew I had to seriously (re)learn some calculus. I looked through a number of books and when I found Calculus for Dummies by Mark Ryan I knew I'd found exactly what I needed, the workbook is helpful too but not essential. Don't bother with Calculus II for Dummies though, it just an ordinary (which is to say useless for the non-naturals) calculus text (although I did pick up PDE from it in a brief look through).
And as it happens, the rules on AP Calculus transfer have also changed and I'm probably gonna wind up taking first year calculus anyhow, although pretty much too late for it to do me much good (it would have been helpful to do that before those classes I mention above). I will probably take it online from a community college rather than at the university though, which is what I'm also doing for the foreign language requirement. Thirty years ago the university didn't make CS majors take a foreign language reasoning that computer languages were foreign. We knew that was a joke then, of course the joke on me is that they fixed it in the interim.
For free online resources, the Kahn Academy videos are pretty good if that form works for you. http://khanacademy.org/'
Don't listen to all the noise on in this thread. You're totally The Man for braving the slings and arrows in returning to school. It's actually pretty cool in a lot of ways. Among other things you get treated with a rather large measure of respect as a result of being old(er). That is probably on account of the kids thinking you're likely to be a professor or at least a grad student.
Connexions (http://cnx.org) is a project for open source book material that is designed to enable teachers to "mix & match" books that are then printed on demand. There are 2336 hits for "computer" in the catalog. No idea if any of that is useful to you. http://cnx.org/content/search?target=&words=computer&allterms=weakAND&search=Go There is also content on "open source in education": http://cnx.org/lenses/rgardler/foss
This very issue (the soon-to-be-reality of computer systems that can and do claim copyright on their output) is why I called on the authors of GPL v3 to include provision for a "Greater GPL". They summarily dismissed the proposal and said such application of copyright is impossible. They were and are quite wrong about that. http://pagesmiths.com/blog/C1602834558/E1763876253/index.html
Whatever Phipps' experience (of which I have no knowledge), he clearly doesn't comprehend Java security. The whole key to safe code in networked environments is the use of security policies. That includes, in addition to "fine grained" access control over OS operations, the ability to restrict access to classes in the classloader mechanism. This is the same stuff that happens whether you're doing applets in a web browser or a servlet in a web application container (including Sun's Glassfish).
Your ideas are being stolen. Not only don't tell anyone what they are, don't even think about them. Hidden in the walls of your dorm are dream snatchers which are recording and patenting every thought you have. Don't think this is a joke or you will regret not taking this extremely important advice.
The original Pragmatic Programmer book is excellent I think.
http://pragprog.com/the-pragmatic-programmer
And since I also think an "agile" approach to managing software development projects is essential for most companies (certainly for any web-oriented development), I'm planning to check out their Practices of an Agile Developer book.
http://www.pragprog.com/titles/pad/practices-of-an-agile-developer
Jim
The prospect of metaprogramming tools raises threats and opportunities for OSS. The biggest threat is that they could be used (legally or not) to strip copyright from OSS. On the plus side, innovation in the next version of the GPL could solve the patent morass by adding a "patent shredder" to "copyleft". I propose the introduction of a "Greater GPL" in GPL Version 3 to address these issues.
http://www.pagesmiths.com/category-ip.html
Googling on relevant keywords like: http://www.google.com/search?q=%22open+source%22+n ih+grant+proposal&btnG=Google+Search&hl=en&lr=&ie= UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
Turns up nice things. Here's the first hit:
http://era.nih.gov/areas/com/SBIR_Awarded.pdf
And there are other interesting pages like:
http://informatics.regenstrief.org/funding
Happy fund hunting!
How can this ban be justified as in any way based on safety? There is no point in comparing them to bicycles and scooters. They are directly equivalent to motorized wheelchairs and have obvious application for those who currently use walkers.
http://phc-online.com/3G_arrow_storm.htm
For those concerned about weight and speed, the popular Rascal three wheeler is 250 pounds with a top speed of 5 mph, or an Arrow weighs 170 pounds less batteries and goes 8 mph.
http://www.northwestmobility.com/Power/x48.htm
Jim