I can almost guarantee that every single one of these "simulators" was built and designed by some company that lived in the congressional district of the people that voted on it.
And I'd bet that more than one of the companies had blood ties to the same congress peoples.
There are multiple ways to solve the problem. Making the phone thicker also results in more material use. Additionally depending on the materials you're still might not get the bending moment of inertia you need.
Plus you miss the marketing opportunity of "Now with a titanium backbone" marketing.
No 'highly skilled' job stays that way forever. What once required a college degree is now being taught at highschools as a skilled trade type job. I've talked teachers at that school and they say they can't graduate people fast enough.
The only response 'modern' technologies seem to get from Slashdot is how the 'old way is better'' and "it'll never work". "Those kids are going to have to deploy apache servers BY HAND like I used to. None of that Docker Cloud Crap".
For those training their replacements, I don't see what the problem is. I hate doing parts of my job, I've already done it once. I would be able to train a high school graduate to do 90% of it and if they have questions I'll be around for the other 10%. But it means that I get to concentrate on doing something else. If you're doing the same thing for more than a year heads up, someone or something is trying to automate it and replace you. Unless you think companies should still be bootstrapping a new Laptop instal by hand instead of having an imaging server.
I'm sure the older engineers that were replaced by kids straight out of college that knew CAD thought they were 'highly skilled' workers as well. Turns out an engineer that can draft is cheaper than an engineer AND a drafter. But don't let that get in the way of the narrative that your skills are 'up to date'.
Everything in it? The supply chain that keeps it there? The machines used to build it? The modern grocery store wouldn't have been able to exist 500 years ago because the automation chain
Go try picking raspberries with a machine.
How about picking something that doesn't already exist.
I can't wait until people like you finally die off so the rest of society can move or with progress. According to your beliefs on this we'd never had a printing press either.
What in the course of human history haven't we automated? We went from having to pick ears of corn to farmers driving vehicles to do it to the vehicles doing it themselves.
Was the fastest and cheapest way they could figure out how to collect all the data they needed. Uber now has hundreds of thousands of rides, routes, etc They know where to install charging stations. They know how a stadium empties after a professional sports event.
They just needed data to feed their algorithms so when they did make the jump to autonomy they weren't doing it then.
And while everything from the 1950s world fair didn't come true verbatim I'd go out on a limb and say life and technology has changed just a slight bit since 1950.
Many have been rejected hundreds of times before giving up.
Has it ever dawned on them, or anyone else that maybe they're terrible people? Or maybe they just have absolutely no idea how to function around the other gender?
I can almost guarantee that every single one of these "simulators" was built and designed by some company that lived in the congressional district of the people that voted on it.
And I'd bet that more than one of the companies had blood ties to the same congress peoples.
Honest question, what technologies exist to get the IO density that you can get with BGA? What alternatives are there?
There are multiple ways to solve the problem. Making the phone thicker also results in more material use. Additionally depending on the materials you're still might not get the bending moment of inertia you need.
Plus you miss the marketing opportunity of "Now with a titanium backbone" marketing.
Sounds like apple could use some mechanical engineers to stiffen up the case by design.
Why in God's name are you using a Microsoft product for scientific documents?
Yes, me and my single computer on a single browser quite enjoy bookmarks.
These days most distros ask you what you want to install. PC-BSD does as well.
I've never installed KDE. I didn't like it when I tried it before. For tiling I use Awesome for non tiling it's MATE/Cinnamon.
Perhaps the users have spoken and most prefer the Gnome2/MATE/Cinnamon style interface. The rest of us are on Awesome, Xfce or something else.
Anyone else is required to satisfy the entitlement mentality of an employer's unrealistic qualifications.
What was unrealistic about any of the jobs I posted? They all seem perfectly reasonable to me.
> Give us a call when there are plenty of HIRES of US citizens for these, or any, positions.
Um, 'Murican born. 'Murican trained white boy. Getting poached by those companies because of what buzzwords are in my resume.
No 'highly skilled' job stays that way forever. What once required a college degree is now being taught at highschools as a skilled trade type job. I've talked teachers at that school and they say they can't graduate people fast enough.
The only response 'modern' technologies seem to get from Slashdot is how the 'old way is better'' and "it'll never work". "Those kids are going to have to deploy apache servers BY HAND like I used to. None of that Docker Cloud Crap".
For example "graphical programming languages", which by Slashdot standards are terrible, has a lot of job openings. There are plenty of jobs for hardware in the loop (HIL) testers. Same goes for people that know CAN/J1939 and the tools that go with it
For those training their replacements, I don't see what the problem is. I hate doing parts of my job, I've already done it once. I would be able to train a high school graduate to do 90% of it and if they have questions I'll be around for the other 10%. But it means that I get to concentrate on doing something else. If you're doing the same thing for more than a year heads up, someone or something is trying to automate it and replace you. Unless you think companies should still be bootstrapping a new Laptop instal by hand instead of having an imaging server.
I'm sure the older engineers that were replaced by kids straight out of college that knew CAD thought they were 'highly skilled' workers as well. Turns out an engineer that can draft is cheaper than an engineer AND a drafter. But don't let that get in the way of the narrative that your skills are 'up to date'.
There are jobs out there. A lot of them.
Jupyter Notebook makes a great front end to Python and can run on hardware anywhere.
And how many of those things you listed have millions of deaths per year?
You conveniently forget the driving reason behind self driving automation.
At best you're automating one or two steps while adding several manual steps
So will self driving cars not count as 'automated' until it picks your ass up out of the couch and drives you to your destination?
Yeah, graduated a decade ago. Been working automating lots of things since then. Stuff which you claim doesn't exist.
Probes are cheaper.
Plumbing sure seems a lot like automating carrying around buckets.
Do you think those bricks were made by hand? Was the mortar used to bind them mixed by hand as well?
We have electric tooth brushes.
And Bidets.
What is automated about a grocery store
Everything in it? The supply chain that keeps it there? The machines used to build it? The modern grocery store wouldn't have been able to exist 500 years ago because the automation chain
Go try picking raspberries with a machine.
How about picking something that doesn't already exist.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
I can't wait until people like you finally die off so the rest of society can move or with progress. According to your beliefs on this we'd never had a printing press either.
Such as? Because look around you, a lot of everything you see was built with automation.
From getting raw materials out of the ground to giving you electricity. Grocery stores are monuments to automation.
Less Space than a Nomad. Lame
I can't wait to revisit your quote just like all the other ones from the 00s on how things weren't going to happen.
Self driving vehicles (not just cars) are already here. They're just going to get better and are already better than a human in most scenarios.
It isn't going to happen.
What in the course of human history haven't we automated? We went from having to pick ears of corn to farmers driving vehicles to do it to the vehicles doing it themselves.
Automation is coming, get used to it.
the whole point of Uber and Lyft?
Nope.
That being crowdsourcing ride sharing
Was the fastest and cheapest way they could figure out how to collect all the data they needed. Uber now has hundreds of thousands of rides, routes, etc They know where to install charging stations. They know how a stadium empties after a professional sports event.
They just needed data to feed their algorithms so when they did make the jump to autonomy they weren't doing it then.
And while everything from the 1950s world fair didn't come true verbatim I'd go out on a limb and say life and technology has changed just a slight bit since 1950.
How much did the first steam generators cost compared to how much energy they made? Horses were cheaper.
How much did the first cell phones cost compared to how much they cost now? How capable were they?
How much did the first computer cost? How many people had access to it? How capable was it?
Jesus, it's like no one on Slashdot has never had to build prototypes or v1 of anything.
Many have been rejected hundreds of times before giving up.
Has it ever dawned on them, or anyone else that maybe they're terrible people? Or maybe they just have absolutely no idea how to function around the other gender?