C/C++ is pretty heavily used for pretty much every interpreted language, most Python libraries are written in C/C++, pretty much every large project (think Apache, Linux, Windows, BSD (including Mac and iOS), Java, SAP, OracleDB, Chrome, etc. - every engine of sorts, from browsers to games are written in C or C++.
Swift has grown but is not nearly as ubiquitous as Apple makes it out to be, you can't replace 30 years of work in barely half a decade. Many frameworks are still either Objective-C and I find an astonishing amount of work is still being done in C/C++ even for "iOS apps" but even on Mac, you can't get away from a C-variant.
Rust is Mozilla, that's it, because their programmers suck at writing decent software (all Mozilla software has suffered from bloat, plugins and feature creep) they think creating YASL is going to help. But it suffers from a combination of the problems of Mozilla software and the problems any other safe language has. It's not performant, it's bloated and it's trying to do way too much (similar to Firefox/Thunderbird) to be a healthy language.
I also noted the difference between some European countries and the US. Belgium/Netherlands is also more Microsoft-geared. The problem with C# is not the C# language, which would be fine standalone (but then why bother) but the fact that Microsoft never bothered porting the "standard libraries" most C# environments have to Linux, BSD and the like. For most things, C# stuff works only on Windows and some of it works with Mono on Mac/Linux but then you once again run into the problems of Safe Languages (Bloated and Slow).
I work in research, Python is indeed used to wire up something quick or to translate from one system to the other (it has somewhat the same function Perl had 20 years ago) but I also work in HPC, most of what is started written in Python ends up written in C/C++ to be usable and fast, especially for multi-threading or parallel tasking, e.g.. to use on GPU or supercomputer compute nodes.
That's still 14,800 errors per 19 or simplified: 1 out of 778 warnings is true.
Having nothing is better than this, give me $100,000 for saying "educate your users" and you'll have a much better detection rate. The stats have to be reversed, you should only have ~1% erroneous warnings.
What actually happens is that people won't trust the 19 that it actually detects.
Even if you ameliorate the statistics and say this is across 10,000 users which would be the best case, you're still talking about 1 positive warning for every ~10 negative warnings.
You mention languages as being hyped and then mention that people want other languages and give a list of more hyped languages.
People don't use Swift or Go or Rust, nobody uses it as a serious alternative to the established C/C++, Java. People by and large don't even want to use Python/C# if they were starting from scratch.
You shouldn't rely solely on antivirus, but many companies require it as part of a complete security pantheon, sadly, too many people still run Windows on the desktop and click on anything that itself says is trustworthy.
Symantec, Norton etc has in the past whitelisted NSA malware like FinFisher and R2D2 which were quite crude and readily detected by "foreign" AV like Kaspersky and ESET and we also know NSA has developed malware for Mac, Windows and Linux/BSD such as the recent Samba vulnerabilities.
I am already using open source and Linux versions for pretty much everything I do.
I'm sure there are people that are comfortable using a certain application a certain way but even things like Photoshop and AutoCAD have gotten the entire kitchen sink worked into them (I started using AutoCAD 20 years ago and have abandoned it after early 2000 versions). Perhaps Eagle for PCB, there are few "good" Open Source PCB GUI although there are plenty of command line/parametric driven ones.
Symantec and the like have outright admitted cooperation with US spooks. At this point, if I were in charge of security I would be buying all computer hardware from outside sources like Huawei and Kaspersky, at least they've indicated unwillingness to cooperate with US stooges and Chinese/Russians infiltration would both be easy to detect and any positive evidence would seriously damage their reputation. Symantec and Microsoft have plainly given NSA and even BSA access to their information.
Slashdot has grown, as have the parties. Most people's ideologies haven't changed that much over the years, it's just that those ideologies for older people now more overlap with Republicans than Democrats. The platforms for both parties have changed too, most things that Democrats espouse today were Republican platforms 3 decades ago, Libertarians are now closer in regards taxes and guns to Republicans than they are to Democrats.
Sure, but it's not $3500. And you can still get a copy of your key that will open your car, it just won't start it. And if you really want to, there are third party keys that you can reprogram yourself for ~$50.
It's a BS FaceBook Please-Fund-Me story. Any mechanic could've taken out the car computer and purchased a new one and installed it for less than $1500. Even if the car was out-of-country, it's a risk you take that when you buy exotic cars you may have to pay extra for repairs.
I had an older Buick that had gone on the fritz where basically the keys would start the car but not unlock the gearbox or any other theft prevention (the radio would refuse to work, the car could not be remotely unlocked). My garage charged $500 to the warranty provider for a brand new "computer" and swapped out the keylock mechanism, and they simply reprogrammed my key (and then I had to go back with my other key to get it reprogrammed as well).
And if I didn't want to pay the dealership an exorbitant amount, there are numerous websites that offer OEM-compatible key replacement and ECU reprogramming services including the Toyota Estima in the story.
Yes, you don't have to pay sales tax in the US on items you will use to produce something or resell but you in turn have to charge sales tax to the entity you sell to. Even if I buy items in China, as a manufacturer, I don't have to pay sales tax on that value (which you should pay if you're using it directly, even if it were purchased out-of-state), but if I resell the item, I have to charge (and in turn pay) the sales tax for the full value I resold it for and in addition, I need to pay income taxes on my profits. There is a thing in most states, that if you make repairs to a property (eg. roof repair) that will not make the property more valuable, then you do not have to pay sales taxes and if it's a mixture of things, you have to pay sales taxes on the portion of items that increase the property value.
The EU is more complicated, since it has a structure of VAT, even I as a US entity have to pay VAT in the UK (where my company is registered as an international entity) if I do business with any EU entity. So anything I import into the EU from the US I have to pay VAT on the value of the item, then when I resell it, I have to pay VAT on the incremental value of the thing (basically the profits), then the profits I re-import in the US I have to pay income taxes on.
But there is no way of avoiding sales and income taxes in the US unless you're rich enough that you can donate it or otherwise invest it, but then you still have to pay taxes once you get it into liquidity, it only makes sense to divest your income and then receive it back in capital gains if the cost/risk is lower than the income taxes would've been in the first place (and hence why 0% income tax states like Delaware get all the incorporations).
Using the VIN number, they can reproduce ANY key for ANY model the manufacturer carries. Sure it may be a bit of a hassle but with proof of ownership, any dealer can reproduce the keys. I've done it a number of time, a key just to get in the car is often free and a smart key can cost $150-250.
For $3500 you could've flown to Japan, gone down to their HQ and flown back with a key.
Given they need to spend $10B in the next 3 years to build the plant, the state gets $560M in sales taxes alone from the construction and another $3-400M as the construction companies pay their workers.
Plus it's incentives, not an outright cash donation.
Remove protected class you SJW hippie. Once they start tracking true hate crimes, I'm sure the project will be cancelled because the the data does not fit your preconceived notions.
You young'in', go back to history class before you spout such non-sense.
There is MASSIVE waste in government, we used to be able to go to the moon on the equivalent value (adjusted for inflation) of the current NASA budget and today even though the cost of rockets and engineering has gone down significantly, they can barely keep the lights on for a few weather satellites and a portion of the n-th iteration of a space station (the US used to have their own).
The US and many governments around the world used to drive world wars for decades on a small portion of today's budgets, now, a couple of debacles in the Middle East that have raged for hundreds of years practically bankrupted the US government.
And Unions were created by, for and ran by the mafia and when the government cracked down, the power vacuum created the opportunity for corporate takeovers of the unions which kept wages low and promotions fixed and bankrupted Detroit and most rust belt states.
You're a retard for implying that allowing someone else free speech has become illegal.
With the current ideological environment amongst the 15-30yo demographic and people like you, I'm sure it won't be long before the first amendment is amended.
Xerox also has had a string of bad management. The previous CEO was Marissa Mayer on steroids. The company has really been coasting by since the late 2000s and also shedding a lot of US factories, labs and divisions to stay afloat.
A lot of (I would say most) packaging is still printed on. Pretty much every box in the mail has a logo of some sort. There's also a lot of plastic being printed on.
And does your figure count just tree-paper production which is typically what you'll get from most estimates but you should also add recycled paper to the mix.
Do an MRI and compare. Just like in the rest of nature, human gender is a biological construct in all aspects of physiology. However it is also noted that it's not a clear black/white division you can strike, just like with the rest of biology, there are variations across not just a 2D but a multidimensional spectrum.
Objective truths about it are never going to be accepted by either sides. There are good engineers and bad engineers across all of the gender spectrum. Hire according.
It's a bit more complicated than that, obviously he would have to pay the 15% in taxes if he converts the securities in usable (liquid) funds. He would also continue having to pay income taxes on everything else he gains (35%). If you give away the securities to a charity, he pays 0%, he also gets to deduct the donation from his income taxes so he lowers his income taxes.
Now if he sets up the foundation in his name, he gives the money to the foundation, it benefits his company tremendously not just today but in the long run, once you've stuck a school with Microsoft, they have to keep paying to keep it up. On the other hand, through his own foundation he pays virtually no "taxes" on it because everything remotely connected to the donation (time, office supplies, home office,...) and all the travel he wants gets expensed, he doesn't even have to pay sales tax on the plane tickets.
The rich do not become nor stay rich by paying their fair share.
C/C++ is pretty heavily used for pretty much every interpreted language, most Python libraries are written in C/C++, pretty much every large project (think Apache, Linux, Windows, BSD (including Mac and iOS), Java, SAP, OracleDB, Chrome, etc. - every engine of sorts, from browsers to games are written in C or C++.
Swift has grown but is not nearly as ubiquitous as Apple makes it out to be, you can't replace 30 years of work in barely half a decade. Many frameworks are still either Objective-C and I find an astonishing amount of work is still being done in C/C++ even for "iOS apps" but even on Mac, you can't get away from a C-variant.
Rust is Mozilla, that's it, because their programmers suck at writing decent software (all Mozilla software has suffered from bloat, plugins and feature creep) they think creating YASL is going to help. But it suffers from a combination of the problems of Mozilla software and the problems any other safe language has. It's not performant, it's bloated and it's trying to do way too much (similar to Firefox/Thunderbird) to be a healthy language.
I also noted the difference between some European countries and the US. Belgium/Netherlands is also more Microsoft-geared. The problem with C# is not the C# language, which would be fine standalone (but then why bother) but the fact that Microsoft never bothered porting the "standard libraries" most C# environments have to Linux, BSD and the like. For most things, C# stuff works only on Windows and some of it works with Mono on Mac/Linux but then you once again run into the problems of Safe Languages (Bloated and Slow).
I work in research, Python is indeed used to wire up something quick or to translate from one system to the other (it has somewhat the same function Perl had 20 years ago) but I also work in HPC, most of what is started written in Python ends up written in C/C++ to be usable and fast, especially for multi-threading or parallel tasking, e.g.. to use on GPU or supercomputer compute nodes.
That's still 14,800 errors per 19 or simplified:
1 out of 778 warnings is true.
Having nothing is better than this, give me $100,000 for saying "educate your users" and you'll have a much better detection rate. The stats have to be reversed, you should only have ~1% erroneous warnings.
What actually happens is that people won't trust the 19 that it actually detects.
Even if you ameliorate the statistics and say this is across 10,000 users which would be the best case, you're still talking about 1 positive warning for every ~10 negative warnings.
You mention languages as being hyped and then mention that people want other languages and give a list of more hyped languages.
People don't use Swift or Go or Rust, nobody uses it as a serious alternative to the established C/C++, Java. People by and large don't even want to use Python/C# if they were starting from scratch.
You shouldn't rely solely on antivirus, but many companies require it as part of a complete security pantheon, sadly, too many people still run Windows on the desktop and click on anything that itself says is trustworthy.
Symantec, Norton etc has in the past whitelisted NSA malware like FinFisher and R2D2 which were quite crude and readily detected by "foreign" AV like Kaspersky and ESET and we also know NSA has developed malware for Mac, Windows and Linux/BSD such as the recent Samba vulnerabilities.
I am already using open source and Linux versions for pretty much everything I do.
I'm sure there are people that are comfortable using a certain application a certain way but even things like Photoshop and AutoCAD have gotten the entire kitchen sink worked into them (I started using AutoCAD 20 years ago and have abandoned it after early 2000 versions). Perhaps Eagle for PCB, there are few "good" Open Source PCB GUI although there are plenty of command line/parametric driven ones.
Symantec and the like have outright admitted cooperation with US spooks. At this point, if I were in charge of security I would be buying all computer hardware from outside sources like Huawei and Kaspersky, at least they've indicated unwillingness to cooperate with US stooges and Chinese/Russians infiltration would both be easy to detect and any positive evidence would seriously damage their reputation. Symantec and Microsoft have plainly given NSA and even BSA access to their information.
Slashdot has grown, as have the parties. Most people's ideologies haven't changed that much over the years, it's just that those ideologies for older people now more overlap with Republicans than Democrats. The platforms for both parties have changed too, most things that Democrats espouse today were Republican platforms 3 decades ago, Libertarians are now closer in regards taxes and guns to Republicans than they are to Democrats.
Sure, but it's not $3500. And you can still get a copy of your key that will open your car, it just won't start it. And if you really want to, there are third party keys that you can reprogram yourself for ~$50.
It's a BS FaceBook Please-Fund-Me story. Any mechanic could've taken out the car computer and purchased a new one and installed it for less than $1500. Even if the car was out-of-country, it's a risk you take that when you buy exotic cars you may have to pay extra for repairs.
I had an older Buick that had gone on the fritz where basically the keys would start the car but not unlock the gearbox or any other theft prevention (the radio would refuse to work, the car could not be remotely unlocked).
My garage charged $500 to the warranty provider for a brand new "computer" and swapped out the keylock mechanism, and they simply reprogrammed my key (and then I had to go back with my other key to get it reprogrammed as well).
And if I didn't want to pay the dealership an exorbitant amount, there are numerous websites that offer OEM-compatible key replacement and ECU reprogramming services including the Toyota Estima in the story.
Yes, you don't have to pay sales tax in the US on items you will use to produce something or resell but you in turn have to charge sales tax to the entity you sell to. Even if I buy items in China, as a manufacturer, I don't have to pay sales tax on that value (which you should pay if you're using it directly, even if it were purchased out-of-state), but if I resell the item, I have to charge (and in turn pay) the sales tax for the full value I resold it for and in addition, I need to pay income taxes on my profits. There is a thing in most states, that if you make repairs to a property (eg. roof repair) that will not make the property more valuable, then you do not have to pay sales taxes and if it's a mixture of things, you have to pay sales taxes on the portion of items that increase the property value.
The EU is more complicated, since it has a structure of VAT, even I as a US entity have to pay VAT in the UK (where my company is registered as an international entity) if I do business with any EU entity. So anything I import into the EU from the US I have to pay VAT on the value of the item, then when I resell it, I have to pay VAT on the incremental value of the thing (basically the profits), then the profits I re-import in the US I have to pay income taxes on.
But there is no way of avoiding sales and income taxes in the US unless you're rich enough that you can donate it or otherwise invest it, but then you still have to pay taxes once you get it into liquidity, it only makes sense to divest your income and then receive it back in capital gains if the cost/risk is lower than the income taxes would've been in the first place (and hence why 0% income tax states like Delaware get all the incorporations).
Using the VIN number, they can reproduce ANY key for ANY model the manufacturer carries. Sure it may be a bit of a hassle but with proof of ownership, any dealer can reproduce the keys. I've done it a number of time, a key just to get in the car is often free and a smart key can cost $150-250.
For $3500 you could've flown to Japan, gone down to their HQ and flown back with a key.
Given they need to spend $10B in the next 3 years to build the plant, the state gets $560M in sales taxes alone from the construction and another $3-400M as the construction companies pay their workers.
Plus it's incentives, not an outright cash donation.
Most of the things you mentioned are taxes or will at some point (eg. pensions) become taxable. What's your point?
The OP claimed legal liability for free speech, which implies LEGAL limitations on allowing free speech.
At this point, the government and public opinion is ran by corporations. So in effect, free speech should extend to companies that lobby.
Remove protected class you SJW hippie. Once they start tracking true hate crimes, I'm sure the project will be cancelled because the the data does not fit your preconceived notions.
Hey, Hillary didn't get elected as president and Obama only almost bankrupted the country.
You young'in', go back to history class before you spout such non-sense.
There is MASSIVE waste in government, we used to be able to go to the moon on the equivalent value (adjusted for inflation) of the current NASA budget and today even though the cost of rockets and engineering has gone down significantly, they can barely keep the lights on for a few weather satellites and a portion of the n-th iteration of a space station (the US used to have their own).
The US and many governments around the world used to drive world wars for decades on a small portion of today's budgets, now, a couple of debacles in the Middle East that have raged for hundreds of years practically bankrupted the US government.
And Unions were created by, for and ran by the mafia and when the government cracked down, the power vacuum created the opportunity for corporate takeovers of the unions which kept wages low and promotions fixed and bankrupted Detroit and most rust belt states.
You're a retard for implying that allowing someone else free speech has become illegal.
With the current ideological environment amongst the 15-30yo demographic and people like you, I'm sure it won't be long before the first amendment is amended.
Xerox, Brother and OKI all have very affordable cartridges, especially after-market.
Xerox also has had a string of bad management. The previous CEO was Marissa Mayer on steroids. The company has really been coasting by since the late 2000s and also shedding a lot of US factories, labs and divisions to stay afloat.
A lot of (I would say most) packaging is still printed on. Pretty much every box in the mail has a logo of some sort. There's also a lot of plastic being printed on.
And does your figure count just tree-paper production which is typically what you'll get from most estimates but you should also add recycled paper to the mix.
Do an MRI and compare. Just like in the rest of nature, human gender is a biological construct in all aspects of physiology. However it is also noted that it's not a clear black/white division you can strike, just like with the rest of biology, there are variations across not just a 2D but a multidimensional spectrum.
Objective truths about it are never going to be accepted by either sides. There are good engineers and bad engineers across all of the gender spectrum. Hire according.
It's a bit more complicated than that, obviously he would have to pay the 15% in taxes if he converts the securities in usable (liquid) funds. He would also continue having to pay income taxes on everything else he gains (35%). If you give away the securities to a charity, he pays 0%, he also gets to deduct the donation from his income taxes so he lowers his income taxes.
Now if he sets up the foundation in his name, he gives the money to the foundation, it benefits his company tremendously not just today but in the long run, once you've stuck a school with Microsoft, they have to keep paying to keep it up. On the other hand, through his own foundation he pays virtually no "taxes" on it because everything remotely connected to the donation (time, office supplies, home office, ...) and all the travel he wants gets expensed, he doesn't even have to pay sales tax on the plane tickets.
The rich do not become nor stay rich by paying their fair share.