To do random sampling on problems with lots of degrees of freedom? I've seen it used in plenty of quantum mechanics problems. It basically gives you some kind of probabilistic distribution of where particles can be. Because obviously that can not be determined precisely. It got quite complicated with 3 particles after a small period, let alone billions of particles.
It is if you buy add-ons, and realize the add-on requires you to undo step 11 and 12 from the primary piece of furniture, which happens to be a 6 ft high mirrored sliding door of your bedroom closet. Of course, undoing step 11 and 12 means also re-doing steps 5 to 10, because that's all the small pieces that are in the way or on the component to remove. Not mentioning you only have about 2 inches to manoeuvre between the ceiling and the top of the closet. This is basically impossible if you're not with at least 2 people.
We once build a friend's Ikea bedroom closet with these specs, it took us 3 long evenings (probably 15 hours total) to get it right.
Yes, IKEA is easy to build when buying small cupboards, chairs and tables. But the bigger stuff with optional packages you really need a small crew.
...and multicultural strategy. Daraiha graduated from Dartmouth College with a B.A. degree in Sociology and a minor in Theatre.
Obviously the best person to motivate young people to choose for a CS curriculum. I bet she can teach them all about the joys of datastructures, algorithms and design patterns. And also tell them why she choose a CS career.
It is 'a' standard. Because gold can't be mined at high rates, same with Bitcoins. The difference is that Bitcoin mining is algorithmically upper bounded and it's increasingly harder to mine new Bitcoins. We know mathematically that you can't just suddenly dilute the value by creating double amount of Bitcoins.
Compare this for example with currency like the USD. During the 2008 crisis the US just printed 200 billion $ (backed up by air... well, or the good faith in the US economy).
Art is also a very convenient way to launder money (but okay, so are Bitcoins;-) ) through offshore companies.
This really depends on what "product" you are product manager of. A product manager of key accounts can be a pretty big deal. And as you said, it puts you at the table with the sales and higher management, so you can network pretty well and climb up the corporate ladder. Much harder to do as a Software Engineer.
Dark Souls has that rewarding feeling when following the same pattern killing common enemies. I'm only 30-40 hrs into the game (this is on PS3 but I think you have Dark Souls on PC) but I often find myself crawling across the same areas (since enemies respawn after a save or 'bonfire' rest - some sort of checkpoint) or just range shooting them (also from tower to tower) with a bow.
Skyrim had the same feel to it.
These are action RPG's, so a bit more involved than First Person Shooters but it basically amounts to the same once you get into it.
If anything, we learned that McGregor can take a few punches in a boxing match. This is a welterweight class fight and McGregor is still a good fighter so he was likely not going to go down in 2 rounds. He tried using his range at first and Mayweather let him, waiting for him to get tired so he could get closer safely and start the actual boxing. McGregor was pretty much worthless at close range but since he could take the beating pretty well he managed to hang on for a few more rounds until he was just a wobbling punching bag (which he already was in the previous round and the ref could have called it quits there). So good call by the ref. The only thing McGregor could get in that fight was more brain damage.
right, and McGregor had a really hard time trying not to hold back the head bashing every time they got clinched. I'm pretty sure the ref could have disqualified him after the n-th time he did that.
Many STEM graduates enjoy arts and literature as well. The difference being that when choosing what to study in college they went for STEM careers. Chances are they read some Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy too.
Obviously some Liberal Arts graduates know a thing or two about math and chemistry as well.
It's a very general talk. I remember it going more in depth but maybe that was another one. However it does touch the 'men are better at spacial stuff' and 'women are better at reading/grammar' claiming that these are the biggest differences found and measured and even there the overlap of the Gauss curve is great.
https://www.ted.com/talks/ben_...
Here's a great Ted talk about differences and their interpretation. The point is that the differences are really not that big and don't tell anything about individuals. What the Google Engineer actually said a few times in his memo.
But I would argue that if you employ people, you actually get more out of them than what you pay them, otherwise it makes no sense. I assume taxes are being paid on the products and services the company produces, and income tax is being paid by the H1B, which should be substantial since they are skilled (not saying there aren't any horror stories). Given the H1B will most likely live in a high cost area, he will pay a lot for cost of living, so that goes back into the economy. You may argue that rent and such also goes to the 1% and doesn't benefit middle class, but same can be said for locals. Their rent also goes to the 1% and so does their Wallmart shopping. Yes, they will wire money back to their family back in the motherland, but as someone who has done some shopping in Gilroy Outlet in Santa Clara, I can assure you most customers are Indian or Chinese.
You are correct and I definitely see it that way too. The 8 o'clock news and politics will consider no HS diploma lowly-skilled and college degree highly skilled.
But I don't like the fact that people who manage to learn highly specific software engineering skills on their own or the job "middle skilled". I've seen "lesser" CS degree people being able to adjust very rapidly and learn new skills; and PhDs that needed hand holding all day long. You don't learn in college how to tweak an Oracle or postgresql database, or how to setup and use maven, jenkins and the like. If you can do that on your own, you are highly skilled, no "middle skilled".
It's been upgraded from Windows 95 and 98 after they had to reboot the spaceship every (earth) 49.7 days.
To do random sampling on problems with lots of degrees of freedom? I've seen it used in plenty of quantum mechanics problems. It basically gives you some kind of probabilistic distribution of where particles can be. Because obviously that can not be determined precisely.
It got quite complicated with 3 particles after a small period, let alone billions of particles.
It is if you buy add-ons, and realize the add-on requires you to undo step 11 and 12 from the primary piece of furniture, which happens to be a 6 ft high mirrored sliding door of your bedroom closet. Of course, undoing step 11 and 12 means also re-doing steps 5 to 10, because that's all the small pieces that are in the way or on the component to remove. Not mentioning you only have about 2 inches to manoeuvre between the ceiling and the top of the closet. This is basically impossible if you're not with at least 2 people.
We once build a friend's Ikea bedroom closet with these specs, it took us 3 long evenings (probably 15 hours total) to get it right.
Yes, IKEA is easy to build when buying small cupboards, chairs and tables. But the bigger stuff with optional packages you really need a small crew.
Well, a DOM parser is an XML parser. HTML is XML.
Treating liver cancer with alcohol.
...and multicultural strategy. Daraiha graduated from Dartmouth College with a B.A. degree in Sociology and a minor in Theatre.
Obviously the best person to motivate young people to choose for a CS curriculum. I bet she can teach them all about the joys of datastructures, algorithms and design patterns. And also tell them why she choose a CS career.
It is 'a' standard. Because gold can't be mined at high rates, same with Bitcoins. The difference is that Bitcoin mining is algorithmically upper bounded and it's increasingly harder to mine new Bitcoins. We know mathematically that you can't just suddenly dilute the value by creating double amount of Bitcoins. ;-) ) through offshore companies.
Compare this for example with currency like the USD. During the 2008 crisis the US just printed 200 billion $ (backed up by air... well, or the good faith in the US economy).
Art is also a very convenient way to launder money (but okay, so are Bitcoins
This really depends on what "product" you are product manager of. A product manager of key accounts can be a pretty big deal. And as you said, it puts you at the table with the sales and higher management, so you can network pretty well and climb up the corporate ladder. Much harder to do as a Software Engineer.
Dark Souls has that rewarding feeling when following the same pattern killing common enemies. I'm only 30-40 hrs into the game (this is on PS3 but I think you have Dark Souls on PC) but I often find myself crawling across the same areas (since enemies respawn after a save or 'bonfire' rest - some sort of checkpoint) or just range shooting them (also from tower to tower) with a bow.
Skyrim had the same feel to it.
These are action RPG's, so a bit more involved than First Person Shooters but it basically amounts to the same once you get into it.
If anything, we learned that McGregor can take a few punches in a boxing match. This is a welterweight class fight and McGregor is still a good fighter so he was likely not going to go down in 2 rounds. He tried using his range at first and Mayweather let him, waiting for him to get tired so he could get closer safely and start the actual boxing. McGregor was pretty much worthless at close range but since he could take the beating pretty well he managed to hang on for a few more rounds until he was just a wobbling punching bag (which he already was in the previous round and the ref could have called it quits there). So good call by the ref. The only thing McGregor could get in that fight was more brain damage.
right, and McGregor had a really hard time trying not to hold back the head bashing every time they got clinched. I'm pretty sure the ref could have disqualified him after the n-th time he did that.
Many STEM graduates enjoy arts and literature as well. The difference being that when choosing what to study in college they went for STEM careers. Chances are they read some Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy too.
Obviously some Liberal Arts graduates know a thing or two about math and chemistry as well.
It's a very general talk. I remember it going more in depth but maybe that was another one. However it does touch the 'men are better at spacial stuff' and 'women are better at reading/grammar' claiming that these are the biggest differences found and measured and even there the overlap of the Gauss curve is great.
https://www.ted.com/talks/ben_... Here's a great Ted talk about differences and their interpretation. The point is that the differences are really not that big and don't tell anything about individuals. What the Google Engineer actually said a few times in his memo.
We used to be able to walk on the moon too.
If someone tosses a beanbag, just toss an exercise stability ball back.
I wonder where Ricky Gervais got his ideas for the original The Office. You know, the one in Slough.
... All the way to the bank.
There's indeed a difference between students enrolling and students successfully graduating.
it will be called blockchaind
I think the average temperature would still be more than boiling hot.
But I would argue that if you employ people, you actually get more out of them than what you pay them, otherwise it makes no sense. I assume taxes are being paid on the products and services the company produces, and income tax is being paid by the H1B, which should be substantial since they are skilled (not saying there aren't any horror stories). Given the H1B will most likely live in a high cost area, he will pay a lot for cost of living, so that goes back into the economy. You may argue that rent and such also goes to the 1% and doesn't benefit middle class, but same can be said for locals. Their rent also goes to the 1% and so does their Wallmart shopping. Yes, they will wire money back to their family back in the motherland, but as someone who has done some shopping in Gilroy Outlet in Santa Clara, I can assure you most customers are Indian or Chinese.
Aren't most pills in blister packs though? Except for maybe the advil bottle or the like?
All hail the mighty root!
You are correct and I definitely see it that way too. The 8 o'clock news and politics will consider no HS diploma lowly-skilled and college degree highly skilled.
But I don't like the fact that people who manage to learn highly specific software engineering skills on their own or the job "middle skilled". I've seen "lesser" CS degree people being able to adjust very rapidly and learn new skills; and PhDs that needed hand holding all day long. You don't learn in college how to tweak an Oracle or postgresql database, or how to setup and use maven, jenkins and the like. If you can do that on your own, you are highly skilled, no "middle skilled".