didn't wake up until 10:00 AM but managed to snag a wii after 4 hrs waiting in line.
i'm utterly pleased with the wiimote concept. terrific system.
blows its competition out of the water.
shame on slashdot for not covering wii launch day.
--RR
I tried to upgrade my ubuntu box for the past 2 nights but the installer
gives up when it can't connect to http://easyubuntu.freecontrib.org/. I'm
not interested in upgrading if it means the non-free codecs stop working.
Anyone else run into this?
--Hc
Sheesh, RTwholeFA! - He goes on to say, "I travel most of the time, so I don't have a desktop machine, only a laptop. It runs Debian GNU/Linux, which was the best distribution in terms of respecting freedom as of the time we set up the machine."
So it's more of of nudge, I'd say, than an "awful stab"... --TRR
targeting multiple platforms encourages better software design and uncovers flaws and weaknesses that might get swept under the rug, so to speak, or ignored in a monoculture.
the quality of software which has been ported to a diverse group of compilers / frameworks / runtimes should improve, not suffer.
would it be so much better to restrict system software choice to linux than, say nt? and what about code forks (which are not a problem in the nt world)?
aol/tw ought to offer a rebranded version of this, integrate it with their services (emphasis on aim), and send out these things for free instead of the damned cdroms (including a net installer for their pc & game console software in the im device).
The
Sakurai books are concise and essential. They used to be known a "black sak" (_modern qm_) and "red sak" (_advanced qm_), although nowadays they both sport red covers.
When building for the synthetic Linux target, the resulting binaries are native Linux applications with the HAL providing suitable bindings between the eCos kernel and the Linux kernel.
Note: Please be aware that the current implementation of the Linux synthetic target does not allow thread-aware debugging.
These Linux applications cannot be run on a Windows system. However, it is possible to write a similar HAL emulation for the Windows kernel if such a testing target is desired.
{rembering days gone by} I recall seeing slabs of a plasticene greenish glassy stuff used inside elementary particle detectors (cerenkov effect maybe) years ago, I wonder if it's the same material.
Thanks!
--TRR
(btw, an animated web demo of your system like the one I linked to would be insanely neato)
a Nd:YLF pumped diode laser was used as the first stage for the current Omega laser due to its wavelength being readily absorbed by solid hydrogen (I would guess) and its relatively high output. it's wavelength lies in the infrared with green and ultraviolet harmonics. some beam splitting and amplification/acceleration is involved with the production of the final pulse.
this laser also seems to be popular photon source in imaging devices for which has replaced expensive and bulky TiSaph equipment in many applications (or so think i read). so . . .
question for slashdot: will the basic technology for the petwatt upgrade be the same?
sorry no links - go hit up the search engines yourself (i refuse to say "google" as verb). . . oh, what the heck:
Although the UML is especially useful for OOD (which itself is not necessarily OOP - consider X Windows which is very OOD but composed of C functions) it was designed to be universal by basing it on an extensible a meta-model (which encapsulates the paradigms, a'la smalltalk).
Also, some of the key pieces of UML are quite useful for any programming paradigm - (eg use cases are probably the safest and most efficient way of analyzing software requirements as well as designing validation tests, regardless of your particular system (a point I'm quite willing to argue at length); another case in point is sequence/timing diagrams which work just as well for assembly language programming as for OO or functional languages).
What to do about poorly documented legacy code? Well I've been involved in a couple of C code design capture efforts. Compared to OOD, the class diagrams came out rather boring and featureless (trivial data classes and great big class utilities). But they gave an exact design specification for the system (very useful for maintenance, incremental enhancements, and training future maintainers).
So which language was your instructor using to demonstrate OOP?
Finally, the less you know about the design, the more difficult, time consuming, and costly the task of trouble-shooting/maintaining the codebase will be.
The lack of a stable notation for software design has allowed many people to re-invent the wheel many times in software related fields.
Hopefully widespead adoption of UML will put a stop to the notion that the new guys are onto to something new (when most often what they've come up with just a new way of looking at something).
A skilled engineer is someone who knows how to architect a model or design from a set of requirements. How to create the blueprints (or in the case M$FT, bluescreens:^).
Coding (not to be confused with integration)) should be trivial, piece-work, 90+% of the time for anyone with 0.5 brains.
didn't wake up until 10:00 AM but managed to snag a wii after 4 hrs waiting in line. i'm utterly pleased with the wiimote concept. terrific system. blows its competition out of the water. shame on slashdot for not covering wii launch day. --RR
I tried to upgrade my ubuntu box for the past 2 nights but the installer gives up when it can't connect to http://easyubuntu.freecontrib.org/. I'm not interested in upgrading if it means the non-free codecs stop working. Anyone else run into this? --Hc
>> Well, because I wanted space travel to be believable how about the apollo missions?}
IBM's Asci White exceeded 12.3 TFlops 3 years ago!
Sheesh, RTwholeFA! - He goes on to say, "I travel most of the time, so I don't have a desktop machine, only a laptop. It runs Debian GNU/Linux, which was the best distribution in terms of respecting freedom as of the time we set up the machine."
So it's more of of nudge, I'd say, than an "awful stab"...
--TRR
0h rubbish -
targeting multiple platforms encourages better software design and uncovers flaws and weaknesses that might get swept under the rug, so to speak, or ignored in a monoculture.
the quality of software which has been ported to a diverse group of compilers / frameworks / runtimes should improve, not suffer.
would it be so much better to restrict system software choice to linux than, say nt? and what about code forks (which are not a problem in the nt world)?
--TRR
the official name's gonna be "F#@!?"
aol/tw ought to offer a rebranded
version of this, integrate it with
their services (emphasis on aim),
and send out these things for free instead
of the damned cdroms (including a
net installer for their pc & game console software
in the im device).
(or someone else should)
Where on earth are you going to find an S/390?
How about Australia ?
--TRR
The Sakurai books are concise and essential. They used to be known a "black sak" (_modern qm_) and "red sak" (_advanced qm_), although nowadays they both sport red covers.
--TRR
Or maybe they're running eCOS on a synthetic Linux target system (itself embedded, of course) ;^}
--TRR
related definitions:
manager n: someone who is ok at golf salesexec n: someone who plays golf quite well--TRR
Xenix .
Is
Not
Exactly
Xenix . .
--TRR
UML is kind of like 4GL smalltalk. --TRR
NU = "Not Unix" (.^l>
--TRR
yep, for serious multi-user applications that is (eg a 50 person software development project).
i guess that 128K, 256K, 640K, yadda-yadda-yadda was quite enough for stuff that
M$FT had also developed for MS DOS (.^7>
--TRR
. . . {goes and reads your post} . . Fascinating.
{rembering days gone by} I recall seeing slabs of a plasticene greenish glassy stuff used inside elementary particle detectors (cerenkov effect maybe) years ago, I wonder if it's the same material.
Thanks!
--TRR
(btw, an animated web demo of your system like the one I linked to would be insanely neato)
maybe the biggest but probably far from the most significant.
what sorts of applications did people run on it anyway? telnet? (we're talking 8086 - 80286 CPUs with less than a megabyte of memory, correct?).
--TRR
since it is so unsightly looking, i imagine it's shape is more functional than fashionable.
--TRR
a Nd:YLF pumped diode laser was used as the first stage for the current Omega laser due to its wavelength being readily absorbed by solid hydrogen (I would guess) and its relatively high output. it's wavelength lies in the infrared with green and ultraviolet harmonics. some beam splitting and amplification/acceleration is involved with the production of the final pulse.
this laser also seems to be popular photon source in imaging devices for which has replaced expensive and bulky TiSaph equipment in many applications (or so think i read). so . . .
question for slashdot: will the basic technology for the petwatt upgrade be the same?
sorry no links - go hit up the search engines yourself (i refuse to say "google" as verb). . . oh, what the heck:
This is pretty nifty.--TRR
Although the UML is especially useful for OOD (which itself is not necessarily OOP - consider X Windows which is very OOD but composed of C functions) it was designed to be universal by basing it on an extensible a meta-model (which encapsulates the paradigms, a'la smalltalk).
Also, some of the key pieces of UML are quite useful for any programming paradigm - (eg use cases are probably the safest and most efficient way of analyzing software requirements as well as designing validation tests, regardless of your particular system (a point I'm quite willing to argue at length); another case in point is sequence/timing diagrams which work just as well for assembly language programming as for OO or functional languages).
What to do about poorly documented legacy code? Well I've been involved in a couple of C code design capture efforts. Compared to OOD, the class diagrams came out rather boring and featureless (trivial data classes and great big class utilities). But they gave an exact design specification for the system (very useful for maintenance, incremental enhancements, and training future maintainers).
So which language was your instructor using to demonstrate OOP?
Finally, the less you know about the design, the more difficult, time consuming, and costly the task of trouble-shooting/maintaining the codebase will be.
--TRR
It's an IDE for VxWorks. Stoopid recrooter!
--TRR
less money also = easier for competitors to snatch away with marginally higher paying offers
(particularly when economic times are good)
--TRR
The lack of a stable notation for software design has allowed many people to re-invent the wheel many times in software related fields.
:^).
Hopefully widespead adoption of UML will put a stop to the notion that the new guys are onto to something new (when most often what they've come up with just a new way of looking at something).
A skilled engineer is someone who knows how to architect a model or design from a set of requirements. How to create the blueprints (or in the case M$FT, bluescreens
Coding (not to be confused with integration)) should be trivial, piece-work, 90+% of the time for anyone with 0.5 brains.
--TRR