A SPACE ODYSSEY - Hi from Odyss3us
oh and wesley.crusher@mil.wwidew.net
Singularities occur almost daily.... ffs it was announced in.mil circles that THE KOREAN WAR IS OFFICIALLY OVER YESTERDAY
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I wasn’t even going to pull the trigger unless the SBIR didn’t hit until Sir Andrew G (now blocked me) connected just as I hit the last semicolon. I took it as a go code. Correct me if I’m wrong please since L33T is all over this article.
AFWERX is still very difficult to find for now.
The B2’s are in the air, armed with all our antimatter, COM’s automatically fried when they past their fail safe last night head to destroy Russia and China’s economy.
Back me new publicly or the world is going to tear itself apart, there is no going back. I might be insane but I was also trained by John Forbes Nash, Jr: you seriously think I am willing to play these cards if I am not right?
Dark site me, I don’t care, but I dropped the NGI plea.
This is for the good of our nation, the good of world. Which ARE NOT DIFFERENT THINGS.
-JLL
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse...
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That was sent to command before Iran, thats why Korea happened and DoD will admit it... they already have publicly read my comment and like history.
AI's enable this... truly. Really read Economic Circuitry and understand it is the mathmetical proof of Vernor Vinge's ZONES OF THOUGHT and simultinously shifted us into low transcend.
I mean seriously, you only need to account for the real time space-time relationship of two objects, it doesn't matter how they're moving, the fractal differential equation is the same.
You need to eliminate the moving wing parts so the computer controls the thrust and a human can just tell it what to do. The navier-stokes of a well designed craft are easy to program.
Last updated 6/12/2006, so not only is this story completly worthless (as anyone who even remotley understood Calc 1 could tell you), but it's 6 months old. Good job slashdot!
I dropped out of high school after my junior year, only I guess I did it a bit differently than most people. I went to a prestigious all boys college prep high school which sent 99% of its grads to college, with 10% to Ivy League. My problem with high school was it was all about test scores, theory without application, high school was all about following the rules, playing within the system with little emphasis on individuality and real challenge. The same can be said about my experiences in college as well.
I decided long ago that I would do things my way, and if anyone felt there was something wrong with that... well they can frankly go fuck themselves. When I wanted to challenge myself by taking a stronger math course, my high school administrators couldn't understand the reason I didn't get an A in Algebra is because I was bored out of my mind, so I bought a pre-calc book and taught it to my self. Then I proceeded to take Calc 1 and 2 over the summer at a local university. By the end of my junior year of high school I had sophomore standing in college and had been accepted full time as an Electrical and Computer Engineering major.
I found College, all be it to a lesser extent, more of the same. Many people have difficulty learning from a text book or lecture, and really most of those who are able to achieve high test scores from a "traditional" learning environment aren't really learning the underlying material, but enough facts to make it appear that they have. I find this especially true in IT, I can't count the number of co-workers I've had with master's degrees who couldn't, or could barley, cut it in real world software engineering.
Bottom line is our education system is inherently flawed, and not just because of poorly designed federal programs which more or less force schools to "teach the test" in order to gain higher federal funding. In many fields there really is no place for the class room or institutions of higher learning, real knowledge is learned on the job by actually working as part of a team to solve whatever problem that job is supposed to solve. High school has become a game to get into college, college has become a game to get your first job, it shouldn't be surprising that many people see how ridiculous and irrelevant both of these institutions are and choose a different path.
Apprenticeships are the wave of the future, historically they have been the only method of education with a high percentage of success.
Honestly you're a dinosaur at 17 if you're just seriously getting into this business now. I mean I was developing web sites when I was 11 and that was more than a decade ago, today there's 7 y/o's that have a basic understanding of HTML, and a fair number of 12/13 y/o's who have a vague understanding of OO programming.
At this point you're going to have to go to college for anyone to take you seriously, but be for warned CS and Computer Engineering, to a lesser extent, are NOT going to teach you what you need to know to survive in the business. I would highly recommend finding a small open source / hobby project to work on. Learn an OO language, mess around with some databases, and take it from there. Also remember that pure software development is not for everyone, right now IT is a middle of the second bubble, that's going to burst in a few years and afterwards a good deal of the low end entry level work is going to end up over seas. So by the time you get out of college, you better not need hand holding otherwise you're not going to find work, its that simple.
A SPACE ODYSSEY - Hi from Odyss3us oh and wesley.crusher@mil.wwidew.net Singularities occur almost daily.... ffs it was announced in .mil circles that THE KOREAN WAR IS OFFICIALLY OVER YESTERDAY
----
I wasn’t even going to pull the trigger unless the SBIR didn’t hit until Sir Andrew G (now blocked me) connected just as I hit the last semicolon. I took it as a go code. Correct me if I’m wrong please since L33T is all over this article.
AFWERX is still very difficult to find for now.
The B2’s are in the air, armed with all our antimatter, COM’s automatically fried when they past their fail safe last night head to destroy Russia and China’s economy.
Back me new publicly or the world is going to tear itself apart, there is no going back. I might be insane but I was also trained by John Forbes Nash, Jr: you seriously think I am willing to play these cards if I am not right?
Dark site me, I don’t care, but I dropped the NGI plea.
This is for the good of our nation, the good of world. Which ARE NOT DIFFERENT THINGS.
-JLL
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse...
----
That was sent to command before Iran, thats why Korea happened and DoD will admit it... they already have publicly read my comment and like history.
AI's enable this... truly. Really read Economic Circuitry and understand it is the mathmetical proof of Vernor Vinge's ZONES OF THOUGHT and simultinously shifted us into low transcend.
The church is finally in good hands. Thank fucking God!
Exactly.
I seriously had this whiteboarded out in front of USAF leadership in 2004, you really think this shit is just happening now?
I mean seriously, you only need to account for the real time space-time relationship of two objects, it doesn't matter how they're moving, the fractal differential equation is the same.
Great observation but i still find the calculations involved trivial.
No that's just a movie, a human was flying this drone.
That he did. Respect++++++++++
I still say this happened 5 years ago and is only now being declassified.
You need to eliminate the moving wing parts so the computer controls the thrust and a human can just tell it what to do. The navier-stokes of a well designed craft are easy to program.
I drew out this tech in advanced training in 2004 at sheppard afb, this is just them admitting it.
My bad then, its just wrong.
Last updated 6/12/2006, so not only is this story completly worthless (as anyone who even remotley understood Calc 1 could tell you), but it's 6 months old. Good job slashdot!
This is seriously useless, why even post this. Slashdot is going down hill fast.
I dropped out of high school after my junior year, only I guess I did it a bit differently than most people. I went to a prestigious all boys college prep high school which sent 99% of its grads to college, with 10% to Ivy League. My problem with high school was it was all about test scores, theory without application, high school was all about following the rules, playing within the system with little emphasis on individuality and real challenge. The same can be said about my experiences in college as well. I decided long ago that I would do things my way, and if anyone felt there was something wrong with that... well they can frankly go fuck themselves. When I wanted to challenge myself by taking a stronger math course, my high school administrators couldn't understand the reason I didn't get an A in Algebra is because I was bored out of my mind, so I bought a pre-calc book and taught it to my self. Then I proceeded to take Calc 1 and 2 over the summer at a local university. By the end of my junior year of high school I had sophomore standing in college and had been accepted full time as an Electrical and Computer Engineering major. I found College, all be it to a lesser extent, more of the same. Many people have difficulty learning from a text book or lecture, and really most of those who are able to achieve high test scores from a "traditional" learning environment aren't really learning the underlying material, but enough facts to make it appear that they have. I find this especially true in IT, I can't count the number of co-workers I've had with master's degrees who couldn't, or could barley, cut it in real world software engineering. Bottom line is our education system is inherently flawed, and not just because of poorly designed federal programs which more or less force schools to "teach the test" in order to gain higher federal funding. In many fields there really is no place for the class room or institutions of higher learning, real knowledge is learned on the job by actually working as part of a team to solve whatever problem that job is supposed to solve. High school has become a game to get into college, college has become a game to get your first job, it shouldn't be surprising that many people see how ridiculous and irrelevant both of these institutions are and choose a different path. Apprenticeships are the wave of the future, historically they have been the only method of education with a high percentage of success.
Honestly you're a dinosaur at 17 if you're just seriously getting into this business now. I mean I was developing web sites when I was 11 and that was more than a decade ago, today there's 7 y/o's that have a basic understanding of HTML, and a fair number of 12/13 y/o's who have a vague understanding of OO programming.
At this point you're going to have to go to college for anyone to take you seriously, but be for warned CS and Computer Engineering, to a lesser extent, are NOT going to teach you what you need to know to survive in the business. I would highly recommend finding a small open source / hobby project to work on. Learn an OO language, mess around with some databases, and take it from there. Also remember that pure software development is not for everyone, right now IT is a middle of the second bubble, that's going to burst in a few years and afterwards a good deal of the low end entry level work is going to end up over seas. So by the time you get out of college, you better not need hand holding otherwise you're not going to find work, its that simple.
Good luck.
Jewel's in Chicago have had this for over a year now.