I would suspect if all that happened here is that the expected model was confirmed, that lots of research under the premise of the expected model being accurate would have already occurred/be taking place currently. I would think confirmation might just make it easier to get funding to do more.
That said, I was itching to burn my mod points on anybody who responded with a non-joke answer. Ah well.
people don't buy or use the crappiest code when given a choice.
People won't sign up to knowingly buy the crappiest code, but unless they are capable of measuring the quality of code, they will hire the cheapest developers, and be blissfully(?) ignorant. ( I assume most management is blissfully ignorant )
It seems to me that most companies think developers are interchangeable and of equivalent quality and capability. With that mindset, why wouldn't you simply hire the cheapest option.
I wasn't planning on purchasing a tablet of any flavor until this opportunity presented itself. Like a lot of others my first thought was buy it now and wait for an Android port. However, I'm really enjoying WebOS so far. Its a much more enjoyable experience than Android 2.2 on my (relatively old) Motorolla Droid.
I may still install Android 3+ at some point in the future, but it would take convincing now, rather than seeming like the obvious thing to do.
It's hard to believe they couldn't have raised taxes to cover the difference. There have to be enough tax payers that have to pay for child care on one day a week now.. w/ how expensive child care is that money alone would have easily covered any extra taxes..
They add 30 minutes per day (30m x 4 = 2h per week) + shortened lunch break (?? 30m x4 = 2h per week) for a total of up to 4 hours a week, and that's equivalent to how much time they would have worked on Friday?
This seems like it would make for an interesting way to collect data from outside the reach of our instrumentation.
Fire some information gathering tools up and latch onto an asteroid that will take a path that should return to earth after making an interesting voyage far away.
When it returns, beam back all of the information it's collected over its trip.
Guarantee funding for your project until the asteroid returns:)
So-called reality programming has taken over television, presumably due to the low cost of production, and the low standards required by viewers.
It seems like the studios will come up with a way of pumping out low production value reality content with a rapid release schedule.
Lower cost of production, more releases, more profit.
Not only is it an odd metric, it seems like high J/MW is the wrong end of the spectrum to be on. Wouldn't you want your energy technology to require the least amount of labor per unit of energy produced?
I would love to work with you. I am also driven insane by a complete disregard for the NEED for regression/unit testing. I'm also uniquely irked when existing tests which I have written begin to fail and go ignored.
I'm not sure if the failure is in the education system (I never formally learned about testing, it just seems obviously invaluable)
I think the easiest thing to blame is too many business people in direct management roles who have no concept of software quality.
This sounds exactly like what a manager would say. I'm sure it varies from situation to situation, but I'm 200% confident that my group would be more productive long term if there was more time spent ensuring quality, and educating each other, up front.
I get that, which is why I said a "rendition" of the image. Maybe its just that they haven't ever processed the image into anything interesting by the time they issue a press release.
Personally, I'd rather see a "real" image than an artist's rendering. I feel like an artist's rendering is what you show on cnn.com, while hubblesite.org, or nasa,gov might show the real thing...
Not that I would buy a game that does this, but it seems like a better alternative would be to recognize the 1st device the game was played on, and store _that_ in the single, unwipable save slot, then compare it with that with the device being played on. At least give the original buyer (player) the ability to replay on their original device...
As I sit with my half-empty cup of water, I assume this would only be used to raise prices for [insert metallic adj.] features, while keeping your price the same for your newly reduced service.
I agree, DLC and in game advertising are likely the true motivating factors.
I'm sure that demand for single player games will keep them getting produced, the difference being that they will still require online connectivity to play.
Maybe I'm in the minority but I was surprised to see all of the posts thinking that the cellular providers would like this. I figured they would prefer to have as many people using (and paying for) their bandwidth as possible
I wouldn't have been surprised to hear that the lobbyists were out in full force against this..
a CPU for the low-end enthusiast. Quite the niche market.
I think Drew Carey would be excellent.
I would suspect if all that happened here is that the expected model was confirmed, that lots of research under the premise of the expected model being accurate would have already occurred/be taking place currently. I would think confirmation might just make it easier to get funding to do more. That said, I was itching to burn my mod points on anybody who responded with a non-joke answer. Ah well.
I believe this is where one says "Wooooosh"
How do you use this... the ball always seems to bounce violently off of it.
people don't buy or use the crappiest code when given a choice.
People won't sign up to knowingly buy the crappiest code, but unless they are capable of measuring the quality of code, they will hire the cheapest developers, and be blissfully(?) ignorant. ( I assume most management is blissfully ignorant ) It seems to me that most companies think developers are interchangeable and of equivalent quality and capability. With that mindset, why wouldn't you simply hire the cheapest option.
I wasn't planning on purchasing a tablet of any flavor until this opportunity presented itself. Like a lot of others my first thought was buy it now and wait for an Android port. However, I'm really enjoying WebOS so far. Its a much more enjoyable experience than Android 2.2 on my (relatively old) Motorolla Droid. I may still install Android 3+ at some point in the future, but it would take convincing now, rather than seeming like the obvious thing to do.
It's hard to believe they couldn't have raised taxes to cover the difference. There have to be enough tax payers that have to pay for child care on one day a week now.. w/ how expensive child care is that money alone would have easily covered any extra taxes..
They add 30 minutes per day (30m x 4 = 2h per week) + shortened lunch break (?? 30m x4 = 2h per week) for a total of up to 4 hours a week, and that's equivalent to how much time they would have worked on Friday?
I'd guess such an emergency notification would have capability to unmute your phone, etc, and give generate a uniquely distinguishable alert.
This seems like it would make for an interesting way to collect data from outside the reach of our instrumentation. Fire some information gathering tools up and latch onto an asteroid that will take a path that should return to earth after making an interesting voyage far away. When it returns, beam back all of the information it's collected over its trip. Guarantee funding for your project until the asteroid returns :)
So-called reality programming has taken over television, presumably due to the low cost of production, and the low standards required by viewers.
It seems like the studios will come up with a way of pumping out low production value reality content with a rapid release schedule.
Lower cost of production, more releases, more profit.
Scene It: The Movie
Not only is it an odd metric, it seems like high J/MW is the wrong end of the spectrum to be on. Wouldn't you want your energy technology to require the least amount of labor per unit of energy produced?
so that he could promptly quit, w/ reasons why G+ was bad (and FB was better?)
I would love to work with you. I am also driven insane by a complete disregard for the NEED for regression/unit testing. I'm also uniquely irked when existing tests which I have written begin to fail and go ignored. I'm not sure if the failure is in the education system (I never formally learned about testing, it just seems obviously invaluable) I think the easiest thing to blame is too many business people in direct management roles who have no concept of software quality.
This sounds exactly like what a manager would say. I'm sure it varies from situation to situation, but I'm 200% confident that my group would be more productive long term if there was more time spent ensuring quality, and educating each other, up front.
I get that, which is why I said a "rendition" of the image. Maybe its just that they haven't ever processed the image into anything interesting by the time they issue a press release. Personally, I'd rather see a "real" image than an artist's rendering. I feel like an artist's rendering is what you show on cnn.com, while hubblesite.org, or nasa,gov might show the real thing...
Why does it seem like every time I read an article about space imaging, there is an artist's rendition, instead of an actual rendition of the image?
Not that I would buy a game that does this, but it seems like a better alternative would be to recognize the 1st device the game was played on, and store _that_ in the single, unwipable save slot, then compare it with that with the device being played on. At least give the original buyer (player) the ability to replay on their original device...
If they can get us to pay them to provide them with people's contact information, I suppose its not much of a detriment to getting into the game...
As I sit with my half-empty cup of water, I assume this would only be used to raise prices for [insert metallic adj.] features, while keeping your price the same for your newly reduced service.
I agree, DLC and in game advertising are likely the true motivating factors. I'm sure that demand for single player games will keep them getting produced, the difference being that they will still require online connectivity to play.
Maybe I'm in the minority but I was surprised to see all of the posts thinking that the cellular providers would like this. I figured they would prefer to have as many people using (and paying for) their bandwidth as possible I wouldn't have been surprised to hear that the lobbyists were out in full force against this..
What if it was Microsoft?