THANK GOD I moved to RSS for keeping up with/., the new UI blows, I can't find an easy way to expand all the stories on the index. Who the thought it would be intelligent to collapse certain stories so you have to click on the titles and reload the page to read themt? I mean, if it was really long, then cut it off and put in a "read more after the 'jump'" link. The reason I stayed with the old design was to read all the stories and decide if I wanted to read comments. That and I could just scroll down the index without having to do a crap load of clicking.
Well, Google Reader to the rescue. No souped up CPU usage and crap JavaScript coding to slow my browser down.
Now, if someone can explain how to expand all the stories on the index page so that I can get that fixed, that'd be great. But until then, RSS only for me.
Right on. Most CS students are unaware that they have signed on for math, set theory, relational algebra, etc. They mostly think that they're going to learn how to program games and become rich.
There's also the other subset of CS students who are forced to take beginning CS classes due to their major. Bioinformatics for instance. They really don't have the head to figure this stuff out.
I would say that 95% of the CS students I have taught in lab or tutoring were in above their heads and 60% either switched majors or failed. Some of them failed the CS intro to programming 3-4 times before they figured it out.
You may not realize it, but the 90/9/1 principle applies to CS as well. 90% won't get it, 9% will get through it, and 1% will go on to Masters or PhD.
So, the best way to teach CS students about Linux is to wrap it up in a series of lectures that include different OSes such as Windows, Linux, Mac OS, DOS, etc. That's probably the only way to get them interested (most will gravitate towards the pretty ones).
I was a TA for my university's CS department for a few years. There was this one semester where two students decided they were going to cheat off each other in Intro to Programming.
They might have pulled it off since they were in two different classes and had two different TAs doing the grading.
Except one of the berks decided he wasn't going to change anything in the copied project, not even in the file headers where the other student's name sat staring at me...
You can forgo the monitor and set up a projector instead. Just use your wall as the monitor and mount the projector to your ceiling. Then you should be able to have all your desk space and a ginormous screen that can double as a movie projector as well.
The difference between this and with Circuit City's Divx fiasco is physical media. Those people who were sucked in by CC's idiocy at least have the hardware that can be hacked or made to work in some way. If I can recall correctly, your player was able to play normal DVD as well as gold and platinum Divx discs.
With digital media and DRM you have to rely on finding a software solution. But there is no physical media.
With respect to "local captcha," you could easily ask residents for the current message on any of a number of signs that belong to churches.
Asking about features other than this is pretty much useless since the color of a church at a certain address can be discerned through any number of google maps or msn maps or whatnot.
Asking about local sports teams is useless unless you know for a fact that everyone on the board is going to deal with sports.
However, anybody can drive past church X on Y street and give the second and fourth words on their message. None of the mapping software will show this unless the sign hasn't changed significantly...
You could also ask this question: When you or your friends are away for a long time, what is one of the top three restaurants that you visit when you come back? or something similar.
There's this one place in my hometown that *everyone* wants to eat at when they visit home...I want to go there right now...:)
The error message says it all: "Server Error in '/SKILLS' Application." It seems, from the way the site is designed to how functional it is that the error in the '/SKILLS' Application is that they do not have any.
Wow, talk about a bunch of dumb@$$ PC monkies... all but one of the keyboards listed were out before there was even a standard form factor for keyboards. Though I agree with a lot of their choices, the C=64 was, by far, one of the best computers I ever owned. I typed on it constantly and didn't suffer from the idiotic mistakes that they obviously did. Perhaps they should have taken a poll instead of coming up with their list themselves (or did they poll the community for this? *ponder* I didn't see).
*shrug* I believe that idiot who didn't actually use these machines shouldn't be the ones declaring how bad they were... I have fond memories of my TRS80 MC-10 as well...
THANK GOD I moved to RSS for keeping up with /., the new UI blows, I can't find an easy way to expand all the stories on the index. Who the thought it would be intelligent to collapse certain stories so you have to click on the titles and reload the page to read themt? I mean, if it was really long, then cut it off and put in a "read more after the 'jump'" link. The reason I stayed with the old design was to read all the stories and decide if I wanted to read comments. That and I could just scroll down the index without having to do a crap load of clicking.
Well, Google Reader to the rescue. No souped up CPU usage and crap JavaScript coding to slow my browser down.
Now, if someone can explain how to expand all the stories on the index page so that I can get that fixed, that'd be great. But until then, RSS only for me.
Right on. Most CS students are unaware that they have signed on for math, set theory, relational algebra, etc. They mostly think that they're going to learn how to program games and become rich.
There's also the other subset of CS students who are forced to take beginning CS classes due to their major. Bioinformatics for instance. They really don't have the head to figure this stuff out.
I would say that 95% of the CS students I have taught in lab or tutoring were in above their heads and 60% either switched majors or failed. Some of them failed the CS intro to programming 3-4 times before they figured it out.
You may not realize it, but the 90/9/1 principle applies to CS as well. 90% won't get it, 9% will get through it, and 1% will go on to Masters or PhD.
So, the best way to teach CS students about Linux is to wrap it up in a series of lectures that include different OSes such as Windows, Linux, Mac OS, DOS, etc. That's probably the only way to get them interested (most will gravitate towards the pretty ones).
I was a TA for my university's CS department for a few years. There was this one semester where two students decided they were going to cheat off each other in Intro to Programming.
They might have pulled it off since they were in two different classes and had two different TAs doing the grading.
Except one of the berks decided he wasn't going to change anything in the copied project, not even in the file headers where the other student's name sat staring at me...
yeesh
You know, if you apply little endian to this you get LOCA...That's just crazy!
Unless you look at the new pocket projectors which may or may not suit your needs. Much less expensive and I believe a 90" screen from them...
You can forgo the monitor and set up a projector instead. Just use your wall as the monitor and mount the projector to your ceiling. Then you should be able to have all your desk space and a ginormous screen that can double as a movie projector as well.
I did, as a joke, not as anything else, especially not Trolling...sheesh.
Perhaps Microsoft doesn't want it's tech support searching for certain things while on the job?
The difference between this and with Circuit City's Divx fiasco is physical media. Those people who were sucked in by CC's idiocy at least have the hardware that can be hacked or made to work in some way. If I can recall correctly, your player was able to play normal DVD as well as gold and platinum Divx discs.
With digital media and DRM you have to rely on finding a software solution. But there is no physical media.
I hit womprats in my TI-36 SOLAR which had only 1 memory and 2 operand registers...But I could only hit womprats during the day...
With respect to "local captcha," you could easily ask residents for the current message on any of a number of signs that belong to churches.
Asking about features other than this is pretty much useless since the color of a church at a certain address can be discerned through any number of google maps or msn maps or whatnot.
Asking about local sports teams is useless unless you know for a fact that everyone on the board is going to deal with sports.
However, anybody can drive past church X on Y street and give the second and fourth words on their message. None of the mapping software will show this unless the sign hasn't changed significantly...
You could also ask this question: When you or your friends are away for a long time, what is one of the top three restaurants that you visit when you come back? or something similar.
There's this one place in my hometown that *everyone* wants to eat at when they visit home...I want to go there right now... :)
The error message says it all: "Server Error in '/SKILLS' Application." It seems, from the way the site is designed to how functional it is that the error in the '/SKILLS' Application is that they do not have any.
Wow, talk about a bunch of dumb@$$ PC monkies... all but one of the keyboards listed were out before there was even a standard form factor for keyboards. Though I agree with a lot of their choices, the C=64 was, by far, one of the best computers I ever owned. I typed on it constantly and didn't suffer from the idiotic mistakes that they obviously did. Perhaps they should have taken a poll instead of coming up with their list themselves (or did they poll the community for this? *ponder* I didn't see).
*shrug* I believe that idiot who didn't actually use these machines shouldn't be the ones declaring how bad they were... I have fond memories of my TRS80 MC-10 as well...