There are, but they probably didn't put in the extra work to be in a position to have the extra $15k on offer. It goes to a better standard of living. Nicer house, more stuff in it, not having to scrimp as much to get by. Buying power for the things that give your kids a better life - camps and schools and computers. A prettier wife and a more sultry mistress. A second kid. It's certainly easier to be happy when you aren't worrying as much about money.
MATLAB(5.x) is just C with matrices as the only datatype. It is actually pretty easy to use and has a ton of built-ins. Later versions do allow OOP. I wouldn't write a web server in it, but if you want to crunch numbers it is really handy.
You are right on target. My 650 is the best device I own. It has replaced my 20 GB mp3 and I can Terminal Service into my real computer if I want to do any real computing. The camera isn't great, but always having access to both a reasonably decent still and video camera more than makes up for the quality. Plus I can watch videos/DVDs that I have transfered to the SD card and set up for 320x240.
I co-oped for Lexmark for a couple of years during school. My main task was reverse engineering HP toner cartridges so that Lexmark could sell a slightly cheaper version.
I've found I spend a lot more time reading web pages when I use RSS, since everything I open is something I want to see. At least when I was surfing I would eventually get bored with crappy links or results and go back to work. Now I feel like I have to at least check out everything my aggregator pulls together or I can't mark it as read. Maybe just my OCD...
I like assigning the scroll wheel to alt-tab. That way you at least bring up something that might be work, rather than the desktop which looks like you are hiding something.
I've had mine for about a month, and I am really happy with it. The sound is great and the features are unmatched. If you want to use it with corporate Exchange Server make sure your company runs the right version. Get a bluetooth headset and a 1GB SD card and you are set.
I work in A.I. creating expert systems to replace people that take more than.02 seconds to do such routine tasks as underwriting your mortgage application. The move over the last few years has been for clients to ask us to automate as much of the IT involvement as possible. It just takes them too long to get changes implemented as there aren't enough people to go do the work. Some of these applications need to change as rates fluctuate during the day, and IT response is typically not instant.
Our typical deployed system needs almost no IT interaction and lets the business users do almost everything that IT once considered sacred. Should have gotten an MBA...
How do you know what your readers are thinking?
There are, but they probably didn't put in the extra work to be in a position to have the extra $15k on offer. It goes to a better standard of living. Nicer house, more stuff in it, not having to scrimp as much to get by. Buying power for the things that give your kids a better life - camps and schools and computers. A prettier wife and a more sultry mistress. A second kid. It's certainly easier to be happy when you aren't worrying as much about money.
What am I doing here then?
I've set up a poll based on your question here. So far voting is in the lead.
They have been working for my blog, but they definitely freaked me out the first time I saw them. They knew me so well I had to use them.
TFA claims you can use your USB devices "anywhere in the room". Looks like it might only be short range.
MATLAB(5.x) is just C with matrices as the only datatype. It is actually pretty easy to use and has a ton of built-ins. Later versions do allow OOP. I wouldn't write a web server in it, but if you want to crunch numbers it is really handy.
You are right on target. My 650 is the best device I own. It has replaced my 20 GB mp3 and I can Terminal Service into my real computer if I want to do any real computing. The camera isn't great, but always having access to both a reasonably decent still and video camera more than makes up for the quality. Plus I can watch videos/DVDs that I have transfered to the SD card and set up for 320x240.
A nice grain mill (not a drill) would run you about $300.
"Resume" is another fun p2p search. Usually has the name, address, and phone number. Then browse host and check out their kiddie pr0n collection.
I co-oped for Lexmark for a couple of years during school. My main task was reverse engineering HP toner cartridges so that Lexmark could sell a slightly cheaper version.
I've found I spend a lot more time reading web pages when I use RSS, since everything I open is something I want to see. At least when I was surfing I would eventually get bored with crappy links or results and go back to work. Now I feel like I have to at least check out everything my aggregator pulls together or I can't mark it as read. Maybe just my OCD...
I like assigning the scroll wheel to alt-tab. That way you at least bring up something that might be work, rather than the desktop which looks like you are hiding something.
I've had mine for about a month, and I am really happy with it. The sound is great and the features are unmatched. If you want to use it with corporate Exchange Server make sure your company runs the right version. Get a bluetooth headset and a 1GB SD card and you are set.
Only old people think PartersBots can do the nasty.
only stupid people vote for filtering.
pr0n.au is my next investment.
only old people NOAA bout the weather.
I work in A.I. creating expert systems to replace people that take more than .02 seconds to do such routine tasks as underwriting your mortgage application. The move over the last few years has been for clients to ask us to automate as much of the IT involvement as possible. It just takes them too long to get changes implemented as there aren't enough people to go do the work. Some of these applications need to change as rates fluctuate during the day, and IT response is typically not instant.
Our typical deployed system needs almost no IT interaction and lets the business users do almost everything that IT once considered sacred. Should have gotten an MBA...
and you should have what you need. Two cameras for stereo, the range finder for distance and scale and something to crunch all the numbers.
Why not just write your info to XML, then apply XSLT as necessary to fit the app?
Don't all Americans do the bulk of their communication through /.?