Many European countries are closing in on "fake-hybrids". If you care about electrification of cars this is a good thing. People were/are buying expensive hybrid (sport) cars with tax incentives but never bothered to charge the batteries or use the cars properly. The Netherlands cancelled hybrid tax incentives. In Belgium, in order to be classified as a hybrid, they introduced a minimum battery/weight ratio starting from 01-01-2018. Other EU countries have similar plans. Here in Belgium the Porsche E-Hybrids and BMW edrive models were very popular. For 2018 those sales will plummet.
Hopefully the car manufacturers will update their hybrid models and increase the battery packs.
The question is not if we want to rely solely on computers during flying or not. The question is how many times did a computer corrected a pilot from a fatal error and how many times did the computer made a mistake. The latter is now 1 (for 2009 that is) . The amount of times a computer corrected a pilot from a fatal error we will probably never know.
Take one and learn it well. Make sure you understand OO , learn design patterns, uniform your coding. Don't get stuck into a 'simple' webpage or quick winforms. Try to set out some goals and mile stones that you want to reach in your coding skills. Make sure you don't neglect your (project) management and communication skills as well.
When you know Java or C# well, it's not that hard to switch over to the other. It's just syntax.
Yeah I know open source free blablabla.
I'm not paying the Visual Studio license, my employer is, so I actually don't care. Other competition is also asking money for it. Even Sun!! Although they tend to put the extra cost in their hardware. I simply love the one stop shop solution(s) that MS offers.
And the 2000$ Visual Studio license cost every two years. It's peanuts compared to the 24x month salary, social security, dental, hardware etc that my employer has to pay / buy me.
Since the first time i used computers (C64) I always used QWERTY. For a C++ en C# junk as me {}[]() etc are just a lot more easy to type on a QWERTY board.
The problem is that I live in Belgium and AZERTY is the default here. (While 12 miles east of where I live we are in the Netherlands and they have QWERTY). So evey day I need to switch between the two. And to be honest I never get used to it.
After a hard day at work I come home and start typing in the wrong scheme. First I solved it by bringing my own keyboards to my job. But they disappeared overnight. And I also have to work on site with clients.
So i never get used to it. After 5 of doing this I'm even getting frustrated and thinking about switching to AZERTY since that would give me the least amount of trouble when working here.
Here in Europe telemarketing is in buz for a few years now. Parents filled a few lawsuits and won.
Dodgy telemarketing firms offer free tones and images (very popular with 10-18yo). All you got to do is answer a few questions.
After a few days you hear a message on your voicemail. That urges you to call back...to a payline. They even adjust the message to your profile that they pulled from the questions you answered.
When you call back it takes a while before you realise the conversation is fixed. A lot of teenagers were ripped of this way.
Many European countries are closing in on "fake-hybrids". If you care about electrification of cars this is a good thing. People were/are buying expensive hybrid (sport) cars with tax incentives but never bothered to charge the batteries or use the cars properly. The Netherlands cancelled hybrid tax incentives. In Belgium, in order to be classified as a hybrid, they introduced a minimum battery/weight ratio starting from 01-01-2018. Other EU countries have similar plans. Here in Belgium the Porsche E-Hybrids and BMW edrive models were very popular. For 2018 those sales will plummet. Hopefully the car manufacturers will update their hybrid models and increase the battery packs.
Get digital copies of those books, open them with your favorite text editor and do a :
:)
ReplaceAll("sport", "WoW");
ReplaceAll("beer", "Mountain Dew");
ReplaceAll("talking about woman", "techtalk");
ReplaceAll("cars", "computers");
ReplaceAll("espn", "Discovery Channel");
ReplaceAll("Playboy", "torrents");
ReplaceAll("Hustler", "torrents");
There you go. The books will make a lot more sense to you now.
The question is not if we want to rely solely on computers during flying or not. The question is how many times did a computer corrected a pilot from a fatal error and how many times did the computer made a mistake. The latter is now 1 (for 2009 that is) . The amount of times a computer corrected a pilot from a fatal error we will probably never know.
Buy a 16GB card and move all data of your 32MB en 64MB cards to the new one. :)
Take one and learn it well. Make sure you understand OO , learn design patterns, uniform your coding. Don't get stuck into a 'simple' webpage or quick winforms. Try to set out some goals and mile stones that you want to reach in your coding skills. Make sure you don't neglect your (project) management and communication skills as well.
When you know Java or C# well, it's not that hard to switch over to the other. It's just syntax.
Yeah I know open source free blablabla.
I'm not paying the Visual Studio license, my employer is, so I actually don't care. Other competition is also asking money for it. Even Sun!! Although they tend to put the extra cost in their hardware. I simply love the one stop shop solution(s) that MS offers.
And the 2000$ Visual Studio license cost every two years. It's peanuts compared to the 24x month salary, social security, dental, hardware etc that my employer has to pay / buy me.
Since the first time i used computers (C64) I always used QWERTY. For a C++ en C# junk as me {}[]() etc are just a lot more easy to type on a QWERTY board. The problem is that I live in Belgium and AZERTY is the default here. (While 12 miles east of where I live we are in the Netherlands and they have QWERTY). So evey day I need to switch between the two. And to be honest I never get used to it. After a hard day at work I come home and start typing in the wrong scheme. First I solved it by bringing my own keyboards to my job. But they disappeared overnight. And I also have to work on site with clients. So i never get used to it. After 5 of doing this I'm even getting frustrated and thinking about switching to AZERTY since that would give me the least amount of trouble when working here.
Downloaded it from gnutella and sharing. Video is pretty lame. A small dot is just fading in and that's about it.
You replaced your old RedHat 4.25.295 by a new Linux distro? ;-)
--N
Here in Europe telemarketing is in buz for a few years now. Parents filled a few lawsuits and won. Dodgy telemarketing firms offer free tones and images (very popular with 10-18yo). All you got to do is answer a few questions. After a few days you hear a message on your voicemail. That urges you to call back...to a payline. They even adjust the message to your profile that they pulled from the questions you answered. When you call back it takes a while before you realise the conversation is fixed. A lot of teenagers were ripped of this way.