Some uCs have separate sections for 'outside entities'. They're still highly controlled.
- Vendor A sells a RTOS that is certified for ASIL-D. - Vendor B uses Vendor A's product as middleware and certifies it to ASIL-C. - Vendor C buys Vendor B's middle ware and makes a crappy infotainment system that isn't certified.
Can Vendor C now read/write anything in Vendor A's ring of trust?
And when the axe comes swinging that person will keep the job because they're the one that 'knows the system'.
Additionally how do you continue to work on the same thing year after year without getting bored? Automate my workflow, volunteer to take on additional work. Take on additional work. Rinse and repeat.
Learn something. Way too many of my peers thought that once college was done they were done learning. College got them the job and there was no reason to continue learning.
Learn something completely unrelated to your job and bridge the gap.
Right now I'm a mechanical engineer that is trying to play the job of IT DevOps. Because our IT department doesn't understand or want to understand the specific needs of what my group does. "Throw RAM and CPU" at it hasn't worked as our entire toolchain is single threaded and my 8600k beats the pants off of the 16 core dual socket Xeons they give us.
It may be an unpopular opinion, but I actually like Enterprise. I have it at work and uh, found a box that fell off of a truck.
The difference between Pro and Enterprise is night and day. For some reason "Pro" still has crap like Candy Crush in the menu. Enterprise comes bare bones. The released "Professional" is a slap in the face to professionals that just want a desktop OS.
In a house with Ubuntu LTS, FreeBSD, and MacOS X I actually like Windows 10 Enterprise. It's like they actually designed it for *drum roll* desktop users. I don't see how they can claim "Pro" is targeted towards business users. Random junk games showing up in the Menu is not something I want on a business desktop. That should have stopped at Home.
I printed out a keyboard shortcut cheat sheet and can do almost everything without the mouse. If you ignore the close and minimize widgets I can get by using Windows 10 like Awesome WM. UEFI boot doesn't feel tacked on. I don't go through driver hell every time I reinstall, it actually manages to find them or have them installed. (Windows 7 didn't have basic Intel gigabit ethernet drivers...).
I put off upgrading for so long because of the flaming trash heap that was Windows 10 Home on my wife's computer. I also know quite a few others that did the same. Make the installer ask some basic computer questions ("What is an IP address") and give professional users a professional desktop and it might not have the reputation it does.
you certainly won't find a job related to your major.
If you think CS majors are programmers you've failed to keep up with what CS majors actually do. CS of 2017 is not CS 1980. Just like Mechanical Engineering 2017 is a completely different job than Mechanical Engineering 1980.
If you want to be a code monkey go to a programming bootcamp and get a job programming. If you want to do Computer Science you get a CS major.
Or their wallet gets lost or corrupted and they have no backup (we know how good people are at backups)
Or with Electrum you can generate a wallet with nothing but a seed. You could tattoo the seed to get your wallet on your foot and never lose access to it.
You can print it out, make a QR code and put it in a safe deposit box, shove it under your mattress. There are multiple ways to 'backup' your wallet without ever having to actually do a computer backup of your wallet.
"How can mechanical engineers explain their work to CS majors?"
"How can electrical engineers explain their work to mechanical engineers?"
"How can doctors explain their work to engineers?"
I've gotten 'duh' to 'I can already do that in $language' trying to explain my work to CS majors. My wife always gets people in her office that think their Dr. Google skills are a good replacement for her education.
Youtube is the worst. A ton of 'micro bloggers' competing for a fixed number of eye balls.
The worst side affect of that is it's damn near impossible to find a good tutorial on multiple subjects these days. I don't want to watch a 10:01 video (10min the minimum time for ads?) to figure out how to delid my processor or do something on my ardunio, raspberry pi, 3D printer, etc.
What happened to a single page tutorial with written instructions and pictures that I could follow or even print out?
It depends on how they opensource it. We've seen this out of AMD before. Dumping a bunch of manuals and code on volunteers doesn't actually do much.
I don't care if I pay more for Nvidia because Nvidia pays people to develop drivers for my platforms and they work. I don't have any "closed binaries" moral issue when I need to get work done. AMD just dumped their codebase and said "Hey, there it is, do our work for us as well as pay us money for the hardware".
If you look at the history of crashes, nearly all have one thing in common: Many people investing with borrowed money. This happened with tulips, the South Sea Bubble, the 1929 crash, and the sub-prime mortgage crash. I am unaware of any bubble that did not involve a lot of people borrowing or buying on margin.
So far that is not happening with bitcoin.
"Less space than a nomad" in under 24 hours from ShanghaiBill.
But when Perl does it it's suddenly the only True Language?
That's where it gets dicey.
Some uCs have separate sections for 'outside entities'. They're still highly controlled.
- Vendor A sells a RTOS that is certified for ASIL-D.
- Vendor B uses Vendor A's product as middleware and certifies it to ASIL-C.
- Vendor C buys Vendor B's middle ware and makes a crappy infotainment system that isn't certified.
Can Vendor C now read/write anything in Vendor A's ring of trust?
Does anyone know how this is going to affect the embedded world?
For next generation hardware we're looking at consolidating embedded PPC, 68k, PIC, etc to ARM.
... Did you even bother to read the summary? It has nothing to do with if your car was in its spot on election day.
If you don't do it someone else will.
And when the axe comes swinging that person will keep the job because they're the one that 'knows the system'.
Additionally how do you continue to work on the same thing year after year without getting bored? Automate my workflow, volunteer to take on additional work. Take on additional work. Rinse and repeat.
Learn something. Way too many of my peers thought that once college was done they were done learning. College got them the job and there was no reason to continue learning.
Learn something completely unrelated to your job and bridge the gap.
Right now I'm a mechanical engineer that is trying to play the job of IT DevOps. Because our IT department doesn't understand or want to understand the specific needs of what my group does. "Throw RAM and CPU" at it hasn't worked as our entire toolchain is single threaded and my 8600k beats the pants off of the 16 core dual socket Xeons they give us.
Just search the gcc bugzilla.
Why would clang's bugs be in the gcc bugzilla?
It may be an unpopular opinion, but I actually like Enterprise. I have it at work and uh, found a box that fell off of a truck.
The difference between Pro and Enterprise is night and day. For some reason "Pro" still has crap like Candy Crush in the menu. Enterprise comes bare bones. The released "Professional" is a slap in the face to professionals that just want a desktop OS.
In a house with Ubuntu LTS, FreeBSD, and MacOS X I actually like Windows 10 Enterprise. It's like they actually designed it for *drum roll* desktop users. I don't see how they can claim "Pro" is targeted towards business users. Random junk games showing up in the Menu is not something I want on a business desktop. That should have stopped at Home.
I printed out a keyboard shortcut cheat sheet and can do almost everything without the mouse. If you ignore the close and minimize widgets I can get by using Windows 10 like Awesome WM. UEFI boot doesn't feel tacked on. I don't go through driver hell every time I reinstall, it actually manages to find them or have them installed. (Windows 7 didn't have basic Intel gigabit ethernet drivers...).
I put off upgrading for so long because of the flaming trash heap that was Windows 10 Home on my wife's computer. I also know quite a few others that did the same. Make the installer ask some basic computer questions ("What is an IP address") and give professional users a professional desktop and it might not have the reputation it does.
No, I see no value in a purely internal blockchain.
Agreed. It was just the farthest example I could think of from "Everything is public".
I can see a Walmart blockchain where they control 51% of the 'nodes' and force all suppliers to use it (and the have the clout to make it happen).
The "distributed" part is what is important, since it means that no one party can corrupt it.
That is how the current systems are setup.
It doesn't mean that Walmart can't setup an internal only "blockchain" that only runs on their intranet to track store balances.
"Blockchain" is nothing more than a digital ledger with a checksum.
Nothing about using blockchain requires you to use the public ledgers (Like Bitcoin). You can control the entire ledger if you want.
You want the latest Android? You should buy a new phone from us. Your HTC M7 with purple camera is old. Why would you want new software on it?
It's hard to slow down old hardware if you stop supporting it the second I buy it.
you certainly won't find a job related to your major.
If you think CS majors are programmers you've failed to keep up with what CS majors actually do. CS of 2017 is not CS 1980. Just like Mechanical Engineering 2017 is a completely different job than Mechanical Engineering 1980.
If you want to be a code monkey go to a programming bootcamp and get a job programming. If you want to do Computer Science you get a CS major.
https://nuwen.net/mingw.html
Portable and doesn't require any uninstall other than deleting the directory.
Sounds like you hired a CS major when you wanted a code monkey.
A CS degree is not a 'How to program' degree any more than a Mechanical Engineering degree is a 'how to be a mechanic' degree.
"Programming" at this point is a voctech position.
If you are hiring CS majors for programming positions you're going to end up as ill prepared as hiring a physicist for a plumbing job.
Or their wallet gets lost or corrupted and they have no backup (we know how good people are at backups)
Or with Electrum you can generate a wallet with nothing but a seed. You could tattoo the seed to get your wallet on your foot and never lose access to it.
You can print it out, make a QR code and put it in a safe deposit box, shove it under your mattress. There are multiple ways to 'backup' your wallet without ever having to actually do a computer backup of your wallet.
I'll second this. I know I'm an extreme edge case but I want a 'dumb' OpenBSD brick phone.
Dumb phone by day. OpenBSD LTE router by tether.
I've gotten 'duh' to 'I can already do that in $language' trying to explain my work to CS majors. My wife always gets people in her office that think their Dr. Google skills are a good replacement for her education.
The product tie ins on literally every ABC produced TV show weren't a give away?
Youtube is the worst. A ton of 'micro bloggers' competing for a fixed number of eye balls.
The worst side affect of that is it's damn near impossible to find a good tutorial on multiple subjects these days. I don't want to watch a 10:01 video (10min the minimum time for ads?) to figure out how to delid my processor or do something on my ardunio, raspberry pi, 3D printer, etc.
What happened to a single page tutorial with written instructions and pictures that I could follow or even print out?
It depends on how they opensource it. We've seen this out of AMD before. Dumping a bunch of manuals and code on volunteers doesn't actually do much.
I don't care if I pay more for Nvidia because Nvidia pays people to develop drivers for my platforms and they work. I don't have any "closed binaries" moral issue when I need to get work done. AMD just dumped their codebase and said "Hey, there it is, do our work for us as well as pay us money for the hardware".
Trying to follow Twitter 'threads' and hashtags reminds me of trying to follow conversation in a large IRC channel. Pound sign and all.
People replying to each other, not reading what others write, it's just a bunch of people shouting into a vacuum.
Those that fail to study IRC and Usenet are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.
https://news.slashdot.org/comm...
If you look at the history of crashes, nearly all have one thing in common: Many people investing with borrowed money. This happened with tulips, the South Sea Bubble, the 1929 crash, and the sub-prime mortgage crash. I am unaware of any bubble that did not involve a lot of people borrowing or buying on margin.
So far that is not happening with bitcoin.
"Less space than a nomad" in under 24 hours from ShanghaiBill.