Most people don't realize that over 1000 people move to Seattle every week.
$15/hour. Legal pot. Cheap heroin and Fentanyl and a police force instructed to look the other way.
Most homeless are actually from here.
Some is. Seattle is where you go when you aren't earning squat out in the sticks and Seattle advertises $15/hour for everyone. But a sizable amount is from out of state. The local TV station did a human interest bit on homelessness a few months back. They went to the tent camps and asked people whet their biggest problem was. Quite a few complained that they didn't realize Washington State was going to be so cold and damp. Locals? I don't think so.
Where? They've tried this on a smaller level, with tent camps and RV lots set up to give homeless a safe 'community' rather than living under the freeway. But most communities don't want to put up with the burglaries, car prowls and drug needles strewn around. So pretty soon, they close the camp and move them on. How will this work with a fixed facility? Which neighborhood will volunteer to host the opium den? So they'll institute some rules for residents. And that's when the addicts will just pack up and move back into a tent under the freeway.
Subsidized housing can help with the homeless family with children population. They tend to be less of a crime and drug problem. But they tend to be pretty rare compared to the tent camp bums. Mostly, they are 'homeless' in that they are living on friends and relatives sofas. Living in Seattle, I've seen quite a few human interest news spots about the homeless problem. And I have yet to see the news crews find a family with kids living in the hobo camps. Were there any, the motivation to present them as examples would be high. Housing facilities can help the families currently flopped out in someone's den. But we won't see a decrease in the tent camps because those are the hard-core addicts that just won't move.
A writer AT Oak Ridge. Which means she probably quoted the jargon in use at ORNL by it's scientists pretty accurately. It's not like she is a general media reporter that just came in and screwed something up.
Anecdote: I used to work in an aviation electrical power systems group when I was a fresh-faced kid out of college. We were producing a specification for the digital controls for an aircraft electrical system. The spec (which I was reading) didn't use the conventions that many control systems engineers used when defining PID software. When I asked about this, one of my older colleagues pointed out that this was a convention peculiar to power systems. And although it risked greater errors at the coding level (getting plus and minus signs reversed with the result of an unstable system), future power system people understood it and it would make their job of reading the systems block diagrams easier. And the other reason for staying with this odd convention: It weeded out the software developers who were more likely to have a hissy fit if things didn't go their way. In the end, we hired a really smart and capable Vietnamese CS guy who did an excellent job on the controller s/w.
The lesson I took away from this was that there is really no great mystery why the USA is full of basement dwelling sperglords who can code but can't get along in broader industries while those businesses are busy importing H-1B workers.
It's the lower air-pressure over the back of a wing that generates lift.
And that is exactly what over-wing engines provide. By pulling the air over the wing's top into the fan intake, the increase in velocity results in lower pressure on the top surface and lift.
If you don't know even the basics of an industry's terminology
It's their industry and their terminology. Don't like it? Go write software for someone else. It might be an archaic term, but they've been in the business for a lot longer than you have (or you would have recognized the terminology).
Careful there. Referring to software and applications as 'codes' is common in many industries (example "here). People that use such terminology are of much higher than average intelligence. And your mocking their industries' use of jargon will expose you as a basement hacker that hasn't been out in the world talking to actual users.
The cost of a decent chair over its 10-20 year lifetime is even smaller.
Until Microsoft yanks my chair out from under me and tries to install a new one. While I'm standing, they tell me how great it will be when I finally get to sit down again.
Then, it will take me a few weeks to find where the new height and seat back tilt controls are.
For how long as MSWord had VB scripting, .NET and other vulnerabilities buit in?
Most people don't realize that over 1000 people move to Seattle every week.
$15/hour. Legal pot. Cheap heroin and Fentanyl and a police force instructed to look the other way.
Most homeless are actually from here.
Some is. Seattle is where you go when you aren't earning squat out in the sticks and Seattle advertises $15/hour for everyone. But a sizable amount is from out of state. The local TV station did a human interest bit on homelessness a few months back. They went to the tent camps and asked people whet their biggest problem was. Quite a few complained that they didn't realize Washington State was going to be so cold and damp. Locals? I don't think so.
I shudder just thinking of what the open source community will develop.
Where? They've tried this on a smaller level, with tent camps and RV lots set up to give homeless a safe 'community' rather than living under the freeway. But most communities don't want to put up with the burglaries, car prowls and drug needles strewn around. So pretty soon, they close the camp and move them on. How will this work with a fixed facility? Which neighborhood will volunteer to host the opium den? So they'll institute some rules for residents. And that's when the addicts will just pack up and move back into a tent under the freeway.
Subsidized housing can help with the homeless family with children population. They tend to be less of a crime and drug problem. But they tend to be pretty rare compared to the tent camp bums. Mostly, they are 'homeless' in that they are living on friends and relatives sofas. Living in Seattle, I've seen quite a few human interest news spots about the homeless problem. And I have yet to see the news crews find a family with kids living in the hobo camps. Were there any, the motivation to present them as examples would be high. Housing facilities can help the families currently flopped out in someone's den. But we won't see a decrease in the tent camps because those are the hard-core addicts that just won't move.
So if the company says "we'll leave it"
... then the government seizes the companies patents. And production facilities if necessary. See eminent domain.
"Mozilla/Linux"
He's a cheap SOB and will expect everything for free.
or be used as a product.
To paraphrase Warren Buffett (about suckers): Look around the economy. If you can't see the products, you are it.
whether any Spectra has been taken of Steve
Obviously white, with a name like Steve.
5400 degree gas travelling at 13000mph a mere 50-60 miles below the ISS
They just thought it was the holding tank dump on burrito night.
if you keep the sperm organized
We went to the lunch room refrigerator by mistake. Turns out your kid is the offspring of mayonnaise.
She is a writer responsible for communications.
A writer AT Oak Ridge. Which means she probably quoted the jargon in use at ORNL by it's scientists pretty accurately. It's not like she is a general media reporter that just came in and screwed something up.
Anecdote: I used to work in an aviation electrical power systems group when I was a fresh-faced kid out of college. We were producing a specification for the digital controls for an aircraft electrical system. The spec (which I was reading) didn't use the conventions that many control systems engineers used when defining PID software. When I asked about this, one of my older colleagues pointed out that this was a convention peculiar to power systems. And although it risked greater errors at the coding level (getting plus and minus signs reversed with the result of an unstable system), future power system people understood it and it would make their job of reading the systems block diagrams easier. And the other reason for staying with this odd convention: It weeded out the software developers who were more likely to have a hissy fit if things didn't go their way. In the end, we hired a really smart and capable Vietnamese CS guy who did an excellent job on the controller s/w.
The lesson I took away from this was that there is really no great mystery why the USA is full of basement dwelling sperglords who can code but can't get along in broader industries while those businesses are busy importing H-1B workers.
It's the lower air-pressure over the back of a wing that generates lift.
And that is exactly what over-wing engines provide. By pulling the air over the wing's top into the fan intake, the increase in velocity results in lower pressure on the top surface and lift.
If you don't know even the basics of an industry's terminology
It's their industry and their terminology. Don't like it? Go write software for someone else. It might be an archaic term, but they've been in the business for a lot longer than you have (or you would have recognized the terminology).
outweigh any of the additional risks
If that includes getting run over by a transit bus, the benefits must be truly remarkable.
There is exactly one death per person.
So, not counting la petit mort?
Careful there. Referring to software and applications as 'codes' is common in many industries (example "here). People that use such terminology are of much higher than average intelligence. And your mocking their industries' use of jargon will expose you as a basement hacker that hasn't been out in the world talking to actual users.
Stick to breast milk. It's the only way to be sure.
Youtube video (with subtitles) to follow shortly.
Came to post this link. Left satisfied.
The cost of a decent chair over its 10-20 year lifetime is even smaller.
Until Microsoft yanks my chair out from under me and tries to install a new one. While I'm standing, they tell me how great it will be when I finally get to sit down again.
Then, it will take me a few weeks to find where the new height and seat back tilt controls are.
the NSA uses current hardware but programs in assembly
The NSA uses high end FPGAs.