It's very true for the two that I know personally.
Smaller government blah blah blah.
So you don't want roads? Oh yeah I want them smooth as glass.
So you don't want water safety? Law enforcement? Oh yeah I want those.
What don't you want, then? Umm...
My son has the 299.00 diagnosis, and he so far shows no signs of concern for the feelings of anyone. He finds it funny when I wince or say OUCH as he kicks me in the face or nads.
Here's an idea: if you're going to stick with the term "distribution", then use it as "distribution". "Distro" sounds like the name of a beatnik in 1958 or an unfortunate dance fad in 1978, not something an adult would use.
CMU's CS department is actually it's own *school* within the university now. A while back they demanded and extorted that.
Yet 1983-1987 the CS then-department couldn't be bothered to offer an undergrad degree.
LaTeX was a bunch of syntactic sugar for TeX as a reaction to the greater ease-of-use of Scribe.
TeX itself was a mess. Nightmare to get to install and run and came with support for exactly one typeface. Feh.
What's frustrating for me is the total lack of comparisons between LED lamps. I came across the Array Lighting R30's last year and they looked awesome, but $80-100 per lamp is daunting. Now I see $30 R30's at HD that promise more light and a better CRI. Array Lighting says that they have a new $30 65w-equivalent R30 for the same price, but still there are no useful comparisons out there, and I'm loathe to roll the dice to the tune of a couple of grand.
Oh and let's not forget that Voyager was never meant to end up in outer space. Initially it was meant to explore Jupiter and Saturn, but the mission was extended, extended and extended a bit more.
It was intended to do that from the beginning, but those behind it wisely practiced "underpromise, overdeliver". By stating relatively modest goals, they greatly increased the chance that the mission would be considered successful by the PTB's, then by extending it they looked like badasses. I'm not at all downplaying the engineering that went into the probes, but don't discount the politics that it took to get them out there.
If I wanted to rag on stupid engineering, I'd bring up Galileo.
I used to work for a then-prominent computer company. Women weren't 50% of engineering, but they were there in both hardware and software dev roles, and nobody treated them any differently, even though we were in a... less progressive part of the country. I once remarked to the manager of one group that there were no black people in the entire engineering organization, over a hundred people, and he replied that he'd love to hire someone with that ethnic background, but the applicants just weren't there.
Probably they have realised that the traffic chaos will be so bad it will cover most of the UK, and figured it will be better for them if people are rack-mounted that stuck in the traffic.
I for one, fully expect that rack mount rails will be the only thing that moves in East London during the olympics.
So, in other words, it'll be like any other day in London.
It's very true for the two that I know personally. Smaller government blah blah blah. So you don't want roads? Oh yeah I want them smooth as glass. So you don't want water safety? Law enforcement? Oh yeah I want those. What don't you want, then? Umm...
More specifically, Libertarians want government to do less *for everyone but themselves*. They're much like Republicans in this respect.
My son has the 299.00 diagnosis, and he so far shows no signs of concern for the feelings of anyone. He finds it funny when I wince or say OUCH as he kicks me in the face or nads.
Here's an idea: if you're going to stick with the term "distribution", then use it as "distribution". "Distro" sounds like the name of a beatnik in 1958 or an unfortunate dance fad in 1978, not something an adult would use.
That's amazing! I've got the same combination on my luggage! Prepare Spaceball 1 for immediate departure!
No, they didn't. There still isn't an IMAP interface, and it still takes an extra day for messages from Yahoo groups to arrive.
So let's have refreshed MBP's already!
CMU's CS department is actually it's own *school* within the university now. A while back they demanded and extorted that. Yet 1983-1987 the CS then-department couldn't be bothered to offer an undergrad degree.
LaTeX was a bunch of syntactic sugar for TeX as a reaction to the greater ease-of-use of Scribe. TeX itself was a mess. Nightmare to get to install and run and came with support for exactly one typeface. Feh.
Posers parrot simplistic platitudes.
Adding glue to screws and unfinished joints between wood products helps quite a bit.
Huh? *Yours* is the first post.
A year or two ago I bought two Phillips dimmable R30 CFL's. Both died within a month. There was a recall but mine weren't included.
Halogen lamps double as space heaters. Pass.
Your equations don't factor in the additional credit card interest over time for the pricier lamps.
What's frustrating for me is the total lack of comparisons between LED lamps. I came across the Array Lighting R30's last year and they looked awesome, but $80-100 per lamp is daunting. Now I see $30 R30's at HD that promise more light and a better CRI. Array Lighting says that they have a new $30 65w-equivalent R30 for the same price, but still there are no useful comparisons out there, and I'm loathe to roll the dice to the tune of a couple of grand.
Hey, stop looking in my underwear!
How often is there 15mph of wind in those locations? That's a non-trivial amount of wind.
but ultimately objective C's strengths as a rapid development platform won over a lot of coders who might otherwise be spooked away from it.
Walking into Brad Cox' office was all it took for me to distrust ObjC
Oh and let's not forget that Voyager was never meant to end up in outer space. Initially it was meant to explore Jupiter and Saturn, but the mission was extended, extended and extended a bit more.
It was intended to do that from the beginning, but those behind it wisely practiced "underpromise, overdeliver". By stating relatively modest goals, they greatly increased the chance that the mission would be considered successful by the PTB's, then by extending it they looked like badasses. I'm not at all downplaying the engineering that went into the probes, but don't discount the politics that it took to get them out there. If I wanted to rag on stupid engineering, I'd bring up Galileo.
I used to work for a then-prominent computer company. Women weren't 50% of engineering, but they were there in both hardware and software dev roles, and nobody treated them any differently, even though we were in a ... less progressive part of the country. I once remarked to the manager of one group that there were no black people in the entire engineering organization, over a hundred people, and he replied that he'd love to hire someone with that ethnic background, but the applicants just weren't there.
Probably they have realised that the traffic chaos will be so bad it will cover most of the UK, and figured it will be better for them if people are rack-mounted that stuck in the traffic.
I for one, fully expect that rack mount rails will be the only thing that moves in East London during the olympics.
So, in other words, it'll be like any other day in London.
E. The rollercoaster at Kennywood.
What was wrong with the Kindle tablet?
If you have to ask, you haven't used one.
Amazon provides you a return label.
Sometimes. In some situations I've had to pay return shipping.
Sorry, but I will not spend $30 on any cable, for anything, ever!
Hope you never need to use a SAS disk array. SFF-8088 cables are in the $50-90 range.