The questions in this poll are slanted to make people feel negatively about autonomous cars. They talk about removing control and reducing safety standards, things that people are unlikely to agree with. They got their intended result.
This doesn't actually say much about overall public opinion on the cars.
I've had experience with both Edirol and M-Audio devices, and in my experience the Edirol ones come closer to meeting their advertised capabilities and are more likely to come with drivers that work. I had an M-Audio Transit audio interface for my mac, and they were NEVER able to get the drivers to work properly. My friend returned a fairly high-end M-Audio Firewire interface box because it wouldn't work properly with his computer (again, a driver issue we suspect)... I've seen none of these problems with equipment from Edirol.
Loving NetBSD! It's still solid for me. I wish they released binary patches for security updates though. That way I could have a NetBSD box without requiring the full CVS source code on it.:P
I don't like having my F/OSS software held hostage... I'm using the ACTUALLY FREE X11 build of OOo on my Intel mac, and it works great. There's no reason to use NeoOffice, really, or pay their ransom to have it work on your Intel Mac.
When I'm looking for employees my rules don't include anything about formal education, specific work experience, or even what languages they know. But you have to admit that it's important for a programmer to be able to read a spec and meet it, or at least to give you a convincing reason why it's wrong!
I don't like the visual look (it looks like the stories are related) but this thing reminded me that I had an account, so I logged in and updated my prefs.;)
It also reminded me about the sections, so I inlined all the section content. Yay!
does "resolution rate" mean "nothing more had to be done," or "the problem was solved"?
I've called @home numerous times, and didn't get my problem solved... but it wasn't escalated to tier 2 and a truck wasn't sent... so would that be a "resolved call"?
"oh, we have to test your line for the next 48 hours and then we won't call you back like we said. Then when you call us back, we'll say we forgot to do it or the test isn't done yet, and then we'll repeat the process. If it still doesn't work after a week, we'll just hang up on you."
I install this on every NT machine I have to use. It's wonderful! Works great. Patches things at the kernel level so you never have to worry about that pesky control key being in the wrong place, or capslock wrecking your code.
The flash spec is open.
Use your open source magic, and make it happen on the platform you want.
http://www.openswf.org
The point of open source is being able to do stuff yourself, right?
https://www.tiobe.com/tiobe-in...
The questions in this poll are slanted to make people feel negatively about autonomous cars. They talk about removing control and reducing safety standards, things that people are unlikely to agree with. They got their intended result.
This doesn't actually say much about overall public opinion on the cars.
If you already have a USB-C charger, you don't have to buy a new one. The headline is incorrect.
I'm sure most of the downloads were by reporters looking to write a sensational story.
To my math exams, I was allowed to bring a pencil and my student card.
And clothes.
But that's about it. If you needed a calculator, you weren't doing something right or you didn't study.
I've had experience with both Edirol and M-Audio devices, and in my experience the Edirol ones come closer to meeting their advertised capabilities and are more likely to come with drivers that work. I had an M-Audio Transit audio interface for my mac, and they were NEVER able to get the drivers to work properly. My friend returned a fairly high-end M-Audio Firewire interface box because it wouldn't work properly with his computer (again, a driver issue we suspect)... I've seen none of these problems with equipment from Edirol.
Loving NetBSD! It's still solid for me. I wish they released binary patches for security updates though. That way I could have a NetBSD box without requiring the full CVS source code on it. :P
Abolish weird date formats!
I don't like having my F/OSS software held hostage... I'm using the ACTUALLY FREE X11 build of OOo on my Intel mac, and it works great. There's no reason to use NeoOffice, really, or pay their ransom to have it work on your Intel Mac.
Same goes for the MacGimp.
For that price, do you certify to cat5 spec and provide documentation on each drop to that effect?
Essential System Administration, O'Reilly.
The K&R.
and maybe the Camel book, Programming Perl, O'Reilly.
1x Wireless router thingy.
1x iBook 700MHz.
I get enough data center at work, I certainly don't need it at home!
I gave away all of my old computer junk instead of trying to make a network out of it, and my life has improved!
When I'm looking for employees my rules don't include anything about formal education, specific work experience, or even what languages they know. But you have to admit that it's important for a programmer to be able to read a spec and meet it, or at least to give you a convincing reason why it's wrong!
It's possible. But the employment demographic we're looking for aren't really the Windows-using types.
Our job postings include the text "Submit resume in plain text or PDF format."
Resumes submitted in Word format are immediately deleted unread -- the applicant is unable to follow a simple instruction. Test #1: FAILED.
I don't like the visual look (it looks like the stories are related) but this thing reminded me that I had an account, so I logged in and updated my prefs. ;)
It also reminded me about the sections, so I inlined all the section content. Yay!
All is well with the world now.
Yeah, all it needs is some native apps. :)
Mmm.
I just used the money I earned with coffee-powered programming to buy a Rancilio Silvia.
And I'll just skip the first cup of coffee every day. Problem solved.
does "resolution rate" mean "nothing more had to be done," or "the problem was solved"?
I've called @home numerous times, and didn't get my problem solved... but it wasn't escalated to tier 2 and a truck wasn't sent... so would that be a "resolved call"?
"oh, we have to test your line for the next 48 hours and then we won't call you back like we said. Then when you call us back, we'll say we forgot to do it or the test isn't done yet, and then we'll repeat the process. If it still doesn't work after a week, we'll just hang up on you."
heh.
On Windows NT, try this:
:)
ctrl2cap from SysInternals
I install this on every NT machine I have to use. It's wonderful! Works great. Patches things at the kernel level so you never have to worry about that pesky control key being in the wrong place, or capslock wrecking your code.
mmmm. It's an amazing piece of 'ware.
Slow, unreliable, impossible to bring up lights to a preset setting without turning them on first, no way to get feedback on the status of your stuff.
:)
Just homerun all the wiring for your lights, buy a nice CD80 pack, and make some DMX512 lightswitches.
Mackie LM3204.
:)
16 stereo inputs, rack mountable, built-in headphone amp.
Mackie 1202 is nice too, but you'd be wasting the wonderful mic preamps, and it has fewer stereo channels.
Can't beat that.
hehe. Not cheap, but not overpriced either.
No source. So much for the GPL. :)
The flash spec is open. Use your open source magic, and make it happen on the platform you want. http://www.openswf.org The point of open source is being able to do stuff yourself, right?
yes, you can get Oracle for x86 Solaris.