Also cool in opera
on
Opera 8 Released
·
· Score: 2, Informative
If you fuck up and close a tab you wanted, you can undo. In fact, as long as you haven't closed opera, you can open any closed tabs that you had in the session.
From asimovlaws.com
"The Three Laws of Robotics is a hierarchy of commands; each law defers to the one above. The Second Law takes precedence only when the First Law does not apply. Take the example of asking a robot to bring you a spoon. This would not harm a human being, so the First Law would not apply and the robot must obey the order. The Third Law is used only when both the Second and First Laws do not apply. A robot attending to its own periodic maintenance without being told would be an application of the Third Law. With the First Law at the top of the hierarchy, circumstances where a human being might come to harm, such as crossing a busy freeway, are called First Law Situations. Any time a First Law Situation arises, the other laws are swept aside. Overwhelming priority is given to the First Law as often depicted by Asimov, it overrules all the others."
My parents thought "hey, he's good with computers" and signed me up for the test. So I show up with my minimal knowledge of C# (which is ever so close to java, I got lucky) and do what I feel was a fairly good job on the multiple choice. As for the free response.....whoever grades mine will have an easy time since the majority of my writing was comments to the grader.
p.s Yeah, I know I'm an idiot for
a) letting my parents sign me up for the test
b) not canceling the test
c) not studying/seeing what was on the test.
Oh well, I was the only one in the city who took it.
If you fuck up and close a tab you wanted, you can undo. In fact, as long as you haven't closed opera, you can open any closed tabs that you had in the session.
From asimovlaws.com "The Three Laws of Robotics is a hierarchy of commands; each law defers to the one above. The Second Law takes precedence only when the First Law does not apply. Take the example of asking a robot to bring you a spoon. This would not harm a human being, so the First Law would not apply and the robot must obey the order. The Third Law is used only when both the Second and First Laws do not apply. A robot attending to its own periodic maintenance without being told would be an application of the Third Law. With the First Law at the top of the hierarchy, circumstances where a human being might come to harm, such as crossing a busy freeway, are called First Law Situations. Any time a First Law Situation arises, the other laws are swept aside. Overwhelming priority is given to the First Law as often depicted by Asimov, it overrules all the others."
My parents thought "hey, he's good with computers" and signed me up for the test. So I show up with my minimal knowledge of C# (which is ever so close to java, I got lucky) and do what I feel was a fairly good job on the multiple choice. As for the free response.....whoever grades mine will have an easy time since the majority of my writing was comments to the grader. p.s Yeah, I know I'm an idiot for a) letting my parents sign me up for the test b) not canceling the test c) not studying/seeing what was on the test. Oh well, I was the only one in the city who took it.