You hit the nail on the head here. Even IF you received an invite, the SDK was utter crap. I spent 3 hours downloading all of the little pieces, getting the build chain put together, writing a small "hello world" app. At the end, I tried to build it and run it on the VM provided, and it failed, giving me some obscure error. I tried Googling and pushing the build around with all kinds of different parameters and manual packaging but no luck. Their forums were no help at all and the SDK interface itself was just absolute junk to use.
I sort of feel bad seeing a Canadian company like RIM fail, but at the same time they seemed to miss the boat entirely with how they treated the developers right out of the gate.
I've been quitely praying that this becomes the next "hot thing", and by "hot thing" I mean Google turns to dictating that the web must be run on this type of set up. I'd argue that the browser wars currently taking place are one of the reasons our web is still so cryptic and archaic. We sit around as web dev's and hack together gimped shadows of what we could do if we all had a common standard to hit, and a common platform to write for. I honestly feel like I'm working for 4-5 different architectures when I'm developing a website with the amount of different hacks and such I have to put forth to display a site correctly across the net.
Can anyone comment on what exactly this system is doing? From reading TFA and googlin' around it seems like it needs to aggregate all(?) incoming/outgoing aircraft data into a readable strip that humans can then do something with? Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Peak capacity? There's more people in California than ALL of Canada, and no one is complaining there. How the hell are we anywhere NEAR peak capacity? Our urban centres in all of our provinces are a joke compared to the urban sprawl of most US cities.
Two things. First, the humanoid is the result of millions of years of recent evolution. It's a solid design. Sure, you probably can come up with a better design, but why throw away what already works? That's wasteful. Second, we have millennia of human technology designed for the humanoid form. Why throw that away either? Same argument about waste applies.
Sure, on Earth. We haven't been living in space for millions of years, but under the Earth's gravity, the atmosphere, etc. Space is an entirely different environment and we would likely have developed entirely different in that environment. The tools argument is the most valid of the lot, but realistically we could/already have designed something better to accomplish tasks.
10 Here's how it really goes:
"Oo, she has a nice ass."
[girlfriend glares]
"Why are you looking at her ass?"
"Well, she walked by, I just kind of glanced there."
"Why didn't you glance the other way?"
"I don't know, I just didn't."
"What's wrong with my ass?"
"Nothing's wrong with your ass, I was just making an observation."
"Are you saying my ass is fat?"
"No not at all, I love your ass."
The next day:
"My boyfriend doesn't like my ass any more..I don't think he loves me."
"Aw, it's okay sugar, there's boys everywhere! Let me introduce you to my friend Ronaldo, he's single!"
"Well, okay, since my boyfriend obviously doesn't love me anymore."
A week later:
"Well since you have an infatuation with other women's asses, I'm leaving you for Ronaldo. At least HE says I have a nice ass!"
40-some-later GOTO 10
There, fixed that *cough* erm... implemented recursion properly for you.
I'm in London, Ontario and not a single person I know here has said they felt anything. I was in a classroom with ~35 other people at the exact time it happened and no one said or felt anything. I've seen reports that people in Sarnia (west of here) felt stuff, but nothing from people in London.
Funny enough I've been playing for ~1 month and have not experienced ANY of the problems you've had. Sounds like your machine/OS install or something. *shrug*
I sent them an email letting them know that all things from Gawker were removed from my RSS. Surely I'm but a number lost in the slew of people who go there, but with the last few weeks/months of shitty articles, fanatical apple obsession and now this, I'm finished sending my packets that way.
With that title, I'd be hard pressed to believe he even knows how many computers are in his own branch of offices, let alone how many lines of working code/sensors are inside of a production car. Also, I'm pretty certain that an aircraft of that size would be monitoring/controlling hundreds more inputs/outputs than a car strolling down the road.
I wish I had mod points for you. This is EXACTLY what I'm seeing in my cs program right now. Everyone getting marks for effort, half their code works, the other half doesn't. Handing out ridiculously high marks for writing down psuedo-code is what bugs me the most. Our profs will give you marks if you can write down what you need to do, in some improper syntax but still achieve the 'right idea'. I'm apparently mistaken that learning syntax is important. I've been helping people in second year write stuff and they get hung up on writing proper if statements and implementing while loops properly. It baffles me how they got to second year without being able to pop off a for statement without even exchanging neurons. I also know a lot of people who've gotten through with friends writing a lot of their programs because they simply can't do it themselves. The lack of integrity makes me rage haha.
I guess on the flip side, these people who mess around like that are almost a necessity. A friend and I at work had this conversation the other day, how you get management who might have gotten a CS degree but can't code to save their lives. But they're pretty good at managing because they at least have some understanding of what your job actually is. Rather than having some BA/MBA boss who just 'wants things done, now.'
The last part is so true. I'm on my first of three placements in my program and that is the biggest change for me. Not having to constantly(after school) think about how I can put code together to have the next project in on time. Mentally, there's no break during school it seems. It doesn't matter where I am or what I'm doing I'll eventually get lost in thinking about school work, and/or feel guilty about not working on a project or something to do with school.
Yeah I think they could take a good hard look at SS2 and try harder with the sequel. Co-op would be something pretty fun too I think, but a lot of games lack co-op these days that's hard enough to make it fun.
Could be handy if you were already dead on scene and they got there fast enough as well. Roll up a bus full of freezers to toss corpses in, then unload them at the hospital where they can be properly tended to without having to rush or worry about 4-5 patients crashing all at once in critical care.
Getting registered as a Sex Offender isn't so much of a reputation ruiner as it is an entire life ruiner. Good luck getting hired anywhere above minimum wage or keeping your current job, good luck talking to anyone in your neighborhood again, good luck explaining things to people for ever. As parent said, even if you get a court pardon, the public doesn't see it as cut and dry as the legal system might.
I want to know who in their right mind would pay someone to write this? I could make a small shell script to write an article exactly like that. Type in your two topics, multiplied by however many 'battles' you want, and voila, pick the second topic every time as the winner and rejoice.
I can confirm a similar occurrence in my 2008 Ford Escape. If I tap the accelerate button once or twice, it will only go up a small bit, hitting it again will suddenly increase the speed a lot (I don't know how far it would go, I've let it go from 120km/h to 140km/h before I tapped the brakes to turn it off).
It may be smooth enough going 2-3km/h, but will it be smooth/stable enough to hit 50-60km/h* down some steep slopes? I highly doubt it, most humans aren't stable enough when moving that fast because of reaction delay's and such - unless robotics and gyroscopes make huge leaps forward very quickly I can't see this happening.
You hit the nail on the head here. Even IF you received an invite, the SDK was utter crap. I spent 3 hours downloading all of the little pieces, getting the build chain put together, writing a small "hello world" app. At the end, I tried to build it and run it on the VM provided, and it failed, giving me some obscure error. I tried Googling and pushing the build around with all kinds of different parameters and manual packaging but no luck. Their forums were no help at all and the SDK interface itself was just absolute junk to use.
I sort of feel bad seeing a Canadian company like RIM fail, but at the same time they seemed to miss the boat entirely with how they treated the developers right out of the gate.
I've been quitely praying that this becomes the next "hot thing", and by "hot thing" I mean Google turns to dictating that the web must be run on this type of set up. I'd argue that the browser wars currently taking place are one of the reasons our web is still so cryptic and archaic. We sit around as web dev's and hack together gimped shadows of what we could do if we all had a common standard to hit, and a common platform to write for. I honestly feel like I'm working for 4-5 different architectures when I'm developing a website with the amount of different hacks and such I have to put forth to display a site correctly across the net.
Can anyone comment on what exactly this system is doing? From reading TFA and googlin' around it seems like it needs to aggregate all(?) incoming/outgoing aircraft data into a readable strip that humans can then do something with? Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Peak capacity? There's more people in California than ALL of Canada, and no one is complaining there. How the hell are we anywhere NEAR peak capacity? Our urban centres in all of our provinces are a joke compared to the urban sprawl of most US cities.
Uh, where?
Every time I checked, both KDE and Gnome were pretty much busy copying whatever the latest UI abominations out of Redmond were at the time.
Hahaha... ohhhh if only you knew how wrong you are...
Two things. First, the humanoid is the result of millions of years of recent evolution. It's a solid design. Sure, you probably can come up with a better design, but why throw away what already works? That's wasteful. Second, we have millennia of human technology designed for the humanoid form. Why throw that away either? Same argument about waste applies.
Sure, on Earth. We haven't been living in space for millions of years, but under the Earth's gravity, the atmosphere, etc. Space is an entirely different environment and we would likely have developed entirely different in that environment. The tools argument is the most valid of the lot, but realistically we could/already have designed something better to accomplish tasks.
You're living in a fantasy world.
10 Here's how it really goes: "Oo, she has a nice ass." [girlfriend glares] "Why are you looking at her ass?" "Well, she walked by, I just kind of glanced there." "Why didn't you glance the other way?" "I don't know, I just didn't." "What's wrong with my ass?" "Nothing's wrong with your ass, I was just making an observation." "Are you saying my ass is fat?" "No not at all, I love your ass."
The next day: "My boyfriend doesn't like my ass any more..I don't think he loves me." "Aw, it's okay sugar, there's boys everywhere! Let me introduce you to my friend Ronaldo, he's single!" "Well, okay, since my boyfriend obviously doesn't love me anymore."
A week later: "Well since you have an infatuation with other women's asses, I'm leaving you for Ronaldo. At least HE says I have a nice ass!" 40-some-later GOTO 10
There, fixed that *cough* erm... implemented recursion properly for you.
I'm in London, Ontario and not a single person I know here has said they felt anything. I was in a classroom with ~35 other people at the exact time it happened and no one said or felt anything. I've seen reports that people in Sarnia (west of here) felt stuff, but nothing from people in London.
Anyone in/around London have anything?
Funny enough I've been playing for ~1 month and have not experienced ANY of the problems you've had. Sounds like your machine/OS install or something. *shrug*
I sent them an email letting them know that all things from Gawker were removed from my RSS. Surely I'm but a number lost in the slew of people who go there, but with the last few weeks/months of shitty articles, fanatical apple obsession and now this, I'm finished sending my packets that way.
the director of information technology management
With that title, I'd be hard pressed to believe he even knows how many computers are in his own branch of offices, let alone how many lines of working code/sensors are inside of a production car. Also, I'm pretty certain that an aircraft of that size would be monitoring/controlling hundreds more inputs/outputs than a car strolling down the road.
I wish I had mod points for you. This is EXACTLY what I'm seeing in my cs program right now. Everyone getting marks for effort, half their code works, the other half doesn't. Handing out ridiculously high marks for writing down psuedo-code is what bugs me the most. Our profs will give you marks if you can write down what you need to do, in some improper syntax but still achieve the 'right idea'. I'm apparently mistaken that learning syntax is important. I've been helping people in second year write stuff and they get hung up on writing proper if statements and implementing while loops properly. It baffles me how they got to second year without being able to pop off a for statement without even exchanging neurons. I also know a lot of people who've gotten through with friends writing a lot of their programs because they simply can't do it themselves. The lack of integrity makes me rage haha.
I guess on the flip side, these people who mess around like that are almost a necessity. A friend and I at work had this conversation the other day, how you get management who might have gotten a CS degree but can't code to save their lives. But they're pretty good at managing because they at least have some understanding of what your job actually is. Rather than having some BA/MBA boss who just 'wants things done, now.'
Facebook does exactly this.
TL;DR your post, but the subject leads me to wanting to direct you here: Debian Releases
They've used names from Toy Story for all of their releases, why hasn't Pixar started whining like this greedy douche?
The last part is so true. I'm on my first of three placements in my program and that is the biggest change for me. Not having to constantly(after school) think about how I can put code together to have the next project in on time. Mentally, there's no break during school it seems. It doesn't matter where I am or what I'm doing I'll eventually get lost in thinking about school work, and/or feel guilty about not working on a project or something to do with school.
This is golden stuff right here.
Perhaps they need to do this more?
Yeah I think they could take a good hard look at SS2 and try harder with the sequel. Co-op would be something pretty fun too I think, but a lot of games lack co-op these days that's hard enough to make it fun.
Could be handy if you were already dead on scene and they got there fast enough as well. Roll up a bus full of freezers to toss corpses in, then unload them at the hospital where they can be properly tended to without having to rush or worry about 4-5 patients crashing all at once in critical care.
Getting registered as a Sex Offender isn't so much of a reputation ruiner as it is an entire life ruiner. Good luck getting hired anywhere above minimum wage or keeping your current job, good luck talking to anyone in your neighborhood again, good luck explaining things to people for ever. As parent said, even if you get a court pardon, the public doesn't see it as cut and dry as the legal system might.
Very good example haha
I want to know who in their right mind would pay someone to write this? I could make a small shell script to write an article exactly like that. Type in your two topics, multiplied by however many 'battles' you want, and voila, pick the second topic every time as the winner and rejoice.
I can confirm a similar occurrence in my 2008 Ford Escape. If I tap the accelerate button once or twice, it will only go up a small bit, hitting it again will suddenly increase the speed a lot (I don't know how far it would go, I've let it go from 120km/h to 140km/h before I tapped the brakes to turn it off).
It may be smooth enough going 2-3km/h, but will it be smooth/stable enough to hit 50-60km/h* down some steep slopes? I highly doubt it, most humans aren't stable enough when moving that fast because of reaction delay's and such - unless robotics and gyroscopes make huge leaps forward very quickly I can't see this happening.
*Downhill Speeds
You seriously just provided a google search of people who posted google searches and gave that as proof? /Facepalm