I got your point. However, please not that (state sponsored) lottery, scratch-offs etc. have waaaay worse payout than blackjack or roulette.
If you go to a casino, you go in order to be entertained (yes, partly pay someone to play cards with you, but also): watching dressed up people lose and win money and observe how they react to it and experience the thrill of occasionally winning yourself. Now, if you go with the intention to make a fortune, you will be most likely utterly disappointed.
When I am in Vegas, my method is to put $200 in my right pocket and play with the money from that pocket. All winnings go straight from the table to the left pocket. When I am out of money from the right pocket, I leave. I count how much is in the left pocket and being a mathematician muse about the probabilities. I have a good time either way! (I primarily go to see shows though.)
I wonder whether anyone thought to exploit this. For example, it seems that he would not have to pay for traffic tickets. Simply send in a letter that says he cannot pay the fine because he is dead.
(However, I would not think that a "living dead" would get away with destroying property or with murder.)
Most people around me suffer from not having enough time to spend it with their family or on vacation or persuing arts or be politically active etc. The latter is actually a serious problem. There are people who tell me they do not vote because they do not know who to vote for because they have no time to keep up with politics. And when they say that they do not mean the 1 minute sound bites from TV etc. but instead reading research papers and in-depth analysis; maybe a whole book about issues like education, poverty, competition, issues of governence or philoshophy.
Instead people spend time commuting to a job and overall more than *half* of their time awake time on a job. If you are an artist or researcher this may well be what you want to do, but I doubt this is the case for most.
* Institute max working per week and other rules to increase number of employees in the private sector (shrinks government, grows private sector)
Instituting maximum working hours will result in a more expensive workforce. I am not against it necessarily, but in order to prevent the country to lose in international competition, some protection mechanisms will be needed (anti-globalization). And before you say that 2 people working 20 hours can do the same as 1 in 40, answer the following as a practice question:
"If it takes 1 woman 9 months to bring a child to term, how long does it take for 9 women?"
And of course whether the 2 people sharing the salary that the one got earlier will be able to live on it, is not a foregone conclusion either.
Having said the above, I wish that working hours would be reduced to around 32 per week *everywhere*. That would allow more informed citizens and would increase civic participation, etc.
I do not understand what is the big problem with idiot petitions. A one liner response would do: "We had a good laugh at the office. Now we are back to work." These petitions are not binding...
Regarding the Death Star petition in particular, could it be that the public's interest should be interpreted a little bit more on an abstracted level? For example the White House could have said: "Considering the enourmous interest, there will be a Death Star stamp issued in March 2013, commemorating the 30 year anniversary of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative." Or put the Death Star on the new trillion dollar coin to be minted. Whatever. Bureaucrats! Show some class!
Am I the only one who senses a potential problem? They better make sure there are no bugs and else!
Assume the shooter applies larger force (while the pull force is increased), but suddenly the software leaves this mode. This could be due to a software error, battery failure, an ionizing radiation altering the CPU state, whatever (software error is most likely). Then suddenly the rifle goes off (while the shooter applied constant pressure throughout). This could result in a failed hitting of target or an outright disaster.
For example, if the pull force is increased, then only two events should allow it to be reduced: 1. firing occurs either due to the computer resetting it (target match) or the shooter applying the necessary pressure OR 2. complete release of the trigger for a short amount of time (maybe coupled with movement of the gun)
This should be true even if the software disconnects, meaning that the second condition should be guaranteed by a mechanical process.
I just finished my university studies while also working full time, but my situation is still quite different I think. I defended my CS PhD a couple weeks ago in the US where I also work full time as a software engineer. I had a math degree from my (non-US) home country, which was/is not properly recognized. (Should be M.S. equivalent, but there are arrogant and ignorant administrators in the US. Meanwhile my opinion (that I refrained to yell to them) is that the US B. S degree is equivalent to an above average high school diploma from my home country.) So for me it was important to get a US diploma.
Work and school took very long time for me and also for others I met in the same boat. I did it because I actually like doing research and plan to keep doing it. (My software engineering job is math oriented and it is full of interesting problems like compression, boolean optimization, graph partitioning, etc.)
Here is my take: getting a B.S. in CS may help you on paper, but I doubt it will matter much more than 5 years experience and you will not learn much new useful skills getting it. Getting an M.S will take a longer while, will help you much better on paper, but you should consider finances and family situation closely. Are you sure you need a CS degree? I have many coworkers with math or physics or engineering degrees. Any other direction you may consider? Like business and marketing? Augmented with knowledge of software engineering that may triple its value.
If you intend to stick to programming for life, I would also suggest (that you consider) getting involved in some open source projects (with your company's approval) that may look quite good on your resume and offset lack of formal training and may help with networking too.
That still does not explain why the Air Force paid before the software was written? I know it is a lot of money, and companies taking on the job would press for an advance. However considering that 1B is still small compared to the balance sheets of large software companies (Apple, MS, IBM, etc.), I do not get it.
So what was keeping the Air Force from setting the terms to include payment on delivery (other than incompetence)?
The only reason people buy Apple now is familiarity, and fashion... and the fashion statement has grown stale since you can buy them in Walmart now.
Apple Inc. products are as fashionable as a Honda Accord or a Toyota Camry (the comparison stops there, these cars are fairly priced and of excellent quality). These are products for the masses. Apple marketing is outstanding in convincing their users that they are trendy and cool. The fact that only these users think so, while others just are shaking their heads in bewilderment does not deminish the accomplishment on the part of Apple's marketing machine.
Apple products are primarily for those whose understanding of technology is cursory, but who want to pretend they are on the edge. Their actual functional needs of the users are average (few exceptions apply), but they pay a hefty premium for the brand and "belonging".
Not anything though. It is not allowed to report on exit polls until polls closed. It is forbidden to say: X candidate is winning according to the exit polls we need to get our supporters to the booth!
No campaign in the last 72 hours? Then what if your opponent release an attack 72 hours and 1 minute before the election? It seems you cannot defend yourself according to the law... How does this actually work?
Better solution: make the voters aware that political adverts are not to be taken seriously and they are more often wrong than not. Definition of the idiot voter: believes what a political campaign tells them and cannot recognize political ads dressed as news, think tank policy paper etc.
No. You are confusing it with your 401k. Social security is a pay-as-you-go system with guaranteed benefits, an actuary's nightmare... The actuarily prudent system would tie benefits to a (moving average) of incoming contribution, forcing it to be close to be balanced.
As it stands now, the money paid into the system is not invested in a traditional sense. It is invested in infrastructure, in the education of the next generation etc. so when they grow up to work, they can make money and pay the benefits to the retired folks. Considering the state of education and else I would not be confident regarding a good return... The money is not spent on "investing in our future", but rather on wars without clear objectives, inefficient education and health system, bank (union) bailouts, wasteful government programs, farm and ethanol subsidizes, tax-cuts to big oil, other lobby groups, etc. (some of it depends on which aisle you are from). Good luck on collecting.
You are missing the problem too. Vaccination is administered at a given age for children. Older unvaccinated children can infect younger yet unvaccinated ones. The chance of that is reduced if the older kids are vaccinated. (Note, that older kids may travel more and get infected say abroad and bring back the bug, a bug to which the younger kid would not be exposed at that age. Anyway travelling to Africa? Get vaccinated weeks before!!)
It is not necessary that 100% of the population is vaccinated in order to effectively eradicate a bug. Annually changing flu shots are sufficient to be administered to fraction of the population (typically, older people, hospital workers, etc.) which will prevent an epidemic.
No worry. With FOSS you provide source code. The user can decide to compile and install at their own discretion. Of course if a company sells FOSS support they would take on the responsibility. Of course they would be expected to audit the code and the burden is on them not the developer.
Humans are just unintended side show for the parasite, but since these affect behaviour in mice brains, it is not surprising these parasites affect human brains too.
I admit that I did not read the paper. I wonder how they proved causation? Based on what I heard about the data I could only prove correlation. Maybe being suicidal will increase the probability of having cats?
One experiment that could work (but I am no expert in this field) is to compare suicide rates between women with cats infected to women with cats not infected with the parasite. In general you want to eliminate all other factors than the one you want to prove about.
Assume that would show that women with the parasite are more suicidal than women without the parasite (both groups equal in all other aspects). Then I would be tempted to conclude that the parasite causes the suicide tendency, since I do not know how being more suicidal would cause to be infected with the parasite. (Or wait a second...) Anyway is that sound scientific reasoning?
And since we are on the topic. I am still trying to figure out how people brandishing umbrellas promotes cloud formation and rain...:-]
I watch only over-the-air, mostly the PBS Newshour, Nature, NOVA, Masterpiece series. I do not think these will go away. I try to make sure by funding them
I do not have a problem paying for content. But last time I checked cable and dish had commercial breaks while also had a usage fee. That makes no sense to me.
I would welcome an internet based and fan supported distribution model financed through micropayments. Fox et al. can go the way of the dodo as far as I am concerned. The content produced by studios would survive, in fact cutting out the middleman should benefit them as well.
And that is why publishing only that they tried X and worked on Y is not publishable (or should not be and it is not as I am aware) in a top journal. You need an explanation. If the explanation is lacking but the result is truly surprising or revolutionary (cold fusion, cure of up-to-then uncurable condition, faster than light travel, etc.) then you repeat it maybe 5-10 more times? Until that is completed, you may publish a tech report putting your stamp on this work.
I got your point. However, please not that (state sponsored) lottery, scratch-offs etc. have waaaay worse payout than blackjack or roulette.
If you go to a casino, you go in order to be entertained (yes, partly pay someone to play cards with you, but also): watching dressed up people lose and win money and observe how they react to it and experience the thrill of occasionally winning yourself. Now, if you go with the intention to make a fortune, you will be most likely utterly disappointed.
When I am in Vegas, my method is to put $200 in my right pocket and play with the money from that pocket. All winnings go straight from the table to the left pocket. When I am out of money from the right pocket, I leave. I count how much is in the left pocket and being a mathematician muse about the probabilities. I have a good time either way! (I primarily go to see shows though.)
Imagine how pathetic it is when they have to take away someone's license to operate a self-driving car...
I wonder whether anyone thought to exploit this. For example, it seems that he would not have to pay for traffic tickets. Simply send in a letter that says he cannot pay the fine because he is dead.
(However, I would not think that a "living dead" would get away with destroying property or with murder.)
Most people around me suffer from not having enough time to spend it with their family or on vacation or persuing arts or be politically active etc. The latter is actually a serious problem. There are people who tell me they do not vote because they do not know who to vote for because they have no time to keep up with politics. And when they say that they do not mean the 1 minute sound bites from TV etc. but instead reading research papers and in-depth analysis; maybe a whole book about issues like education, poverty, competition, issues of governence or philoshophy.
Instead people spend time commuting to a job and overall more than *half* of their time awake time on a job. If you are an artist or researcher this may well be what you want to do, but I doubt this is the case for most.
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/sustik/QUIC
* Institute max working per week and other rules to increase number of employees in the private sector (shrinks government, grows private sector)
Instituting maximum working hours will result in a more expensive workforce. I am not against it necessarily, but in order to prevent the country to lose in international competition, some protection mechanisms will be needed (anti-globalization). And before you say that 2 people working 20 hours can do the same as 1 in 40, answer the following as a practice question:
"If it takes 1 woman 9 months to bring a child to term, how long does it take for 9 women?"
And of course whether the 2 people sharing the salary that the one got earlier will be able to live on it, is not a foregone conclusion either.
Having said the above, I wish that working hours would be reduced to around 32 per week *everywhere*. That would allow more informed citizens and would increase civic participation, etc.
\includegraphics[width=0.49\textwidth]{numiter.eps}
When I tried to upload the numiter.eps file, I am getting a message that it has an unsupported extension.
-Matyas
I wonder how many elements can or cannot match? For example, if instead of an oblong tables I use a rectangular ones, would that be ok? :-)
I do not understand what is the big problem with idiot petitions. A one liner response would do: "We had a good laugh at the office. Now we are back to work." These petitions are not binding...
Regarding the Death Star petition in particular, could it be that the public's interest should be interpreted a little bit more on an abstracted level? For example the White House could have said: "Considering the enourmous interest, there will be a Death Star stamp issued in March 2013, commemorating the 30 year anniversary of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative." Or put the Death Star on the new trillion dollar coin to be minted. Whatever. Bureaucrats! Show some class!
Am I the only one who senses a potential problem? They better make sure there are no bugs and else!
Assume the shooter applies larger force (while the pull force is increased), but suddenly the software leaves this mode. This could be due to a software error, battery failure, an ionizing radiation altering the CPU state, whatever (software error is most likely). Then suddenly the rifle goes off (while the shooter applied constant pressure throughout). This could result in a failed hitting of target or an outright disaster.
For example, if the pull force is increased, then only two events should allow it to be reduced:
1. firing occurs either due to the computer resetting it (target match) or the shooter applying the necessary pressure OR
2. complete release of the trigger for a short amount of time (maybe coupled with movement of the gun)
This should be true even if the software disconnects, meaning that the second condition should be guaranteed by a mechanical process.
I just finished my university studies while also working full time, but my situation is still quite different I think. I defended my CS PhD a couple weeks ago in the US where I also work full time as a software engineer. I had a math degree from my (non-US) home country, which was/is not properly recognized. (Should be M.S. equivalent, but there are arrogant and ignorant administrators in the US. Meanwhile my opinion (that I refrained to yell to them) is that the US B. S degree is equivalent to an above average high school diploma from my home country.) So for me it was important to get a US diploma.
Work and school took very long time for me and also for others I met in the same boat. I did it because I actually like doing research and plan to keep doing it. (My software engineering job is math oriented and it is full of interesting problems like compression, boolean optimization, graph partitioning, etc.)
Here is my take: getting a B.S. in CS may help you on paper, but I doubt it will matter much more than 5 years experience and you will not learn much new useful skills getting it. Getting an M.S will take a longer while, will help you much better on paper, but you should consider finances and family situation closely. Are you sure you need a CS degree? I have many coworkers with math or physics or engineering degrees. Any other direction you may consider? Like business and marketing? Augmented with knowledge of software engineering that may triple its value.
If you intend to stick to programming for life, I would also suggest (that you consider) getting involved in some open source projects (with your company's approval) that may look quite good on your resume and offset lack of formal training and may help with networking too.
That still does not explain why the Air Force paid before the software was written? I know it is a lot of money, and companies taking on the job would press for an advance. However considering that 1B is still small compared to the balance sheets of large software companies (Apple, MS, IBM, etc.), I do not get it.
So what was keeping the Air Force from setting the terms to include payment on delivery (other than incompetence)?
The only reason people buy Apple now is familiarity, and fashion... and the fashion statement has grown stale since you can buy them in Walmart now.
Apple Inc. products are as fashionable as a Honda Accord or a Toyota Camry (the comparison stops there, these cars are fairly priced and of excellent quality). These are products for the masses. Apple marketing is outstanding in convincing their users that they are trendy and cool. The fact that only these users think so, while others just are shaking their heads in bewilderment does not deminish the accomplishment on the part of Apple's marketing machine.
Apple products are primarily for those whose understanding of technology is cursory, but who want to pretend they are on the edge. Their actual functional needs of the users are average (few exceptions apply), but they pay a hefty premium for the brand and "belonging".
I would allow HFT, but I would like to see a charge for orders/bids not just trades. I suggest a bid/cancel charge of $0.02. That is my $0.02.
Not anything though. It is not allowed to report on exit polls until polls closed. It is forbidden to say: X candidate is winning according to the exit polls we need to get our supporters to the booth!
No campaign in the last 72 hours? Then what if your opponent release an attack 72 hours and 1 minute before the election? It seems you cannot defend yourself according to the law... How does this actually work?
Better solution: make the voters aware that political adverts are not to be taken seriously and they are more often wrong than not. Definition of the idiot voter: believes what a political campaign tells them and cannot recognize political ads dressed as news, think tank policy paper etc.
No. You are confusing it with your 401k. Social security is a pay-as-you-go system with guaranteed benefits, an actuary's nightmare... The actuarily prudent system would tie benefits to a (moving average) of incoming contribution, forcing it to be close to be balanced.
As it stands now, the money paid into the system is not invested in a traditional sense. It is invested in infrastructure, in the education of the next generation etc. so when they grow up to work, they can make money and pay the benefits to the retired folks. Considering the state of education and else I would not be confident regarding a good return... The money is not spent on "investing in our future", but rather on wars without clear objectives, inefficient education and health system, bank (union) bailouts, wasteful government programs, farm and ethanol subsidizes, tax-cuts to big oil, other lobby groups, etc. (some of it depends on which aisle you are from). Good luck on collecting.
Thanks!
You are missing the problem too. Vaccination is administered at a given age for children. Older unvaccinated children can infect younger yet unvaccinated ones. The chance of that is reduced if the older kids are vaccinated. (Note, that older kids may travel more and get infected say abroad and bring back the bug, a bug to which the younger kid would not be exposed at that age. Anyway travelling to Africa? Get vaccinated weeks before!!)
It is not necessary that 100% of the population is vaccinated in order to effectively eradicate a bug. Annually changing flu shots are sufficient to be administered to fraction of the population (typically, older people, hospital workers, etc.) which will prevent an epidemic.
No worry. With FOSS you provide source code. The user can decide to compile and install at their own discretion.
Of course if a company sells FOSS support they would take on the responsibility. Of course they would be expected to audit
the code and the burden is on them not the developer.
Humans are just unintended side show for the parasite, but since these affect behaviour in mice brains, it is not surprising these parasites affect human brains too.
I admit that I did not read the paper. I wonder how they proved causation? Based on what I heard about the data I could only prove correlation. Maybe being suicidal will increase the probability of having cats?
One experiment that could work (but I am no expert in this field) is to compare suicide rates between women with cats infected to women with cats not infected with the parasite. In general you want to eliminate all other factors than the one you want to prove about.
Assume that would show that women with the parasite are more suicidal than women without the parasite (both groups equal in all other aspects). Then I would be tempted to conclude that the parasite causes the suicide tendency, since I do not know how being more suicidal would cause to be infected with the parasite. (Or wait a second...) Anyway is that sound scientific reasoning?
And since we are on the topic. I am still trying to figure out how people brandishing umbrellas promotes cloud formation and rain... :-]
I watch only over-the-air, mostly the PBS Newshour, Nature, NOVA, Masterpiece series. I do not think these will go away. I try to make sure by funding them
I do not have a problem paying for content. But last time I checked cable and dish had commercial breaks while also had a usage fee. That makes no sense to me.
I would welcome an internet based and fan supported distribution model financed through micropayments. Fox et al. can go the way of the dodo as far as I am concerned. The content produced by studios would survive, in fact cutting out the middleman should benefit them as well.
And that is why publishing only that they tried X and worked on Y is not publishable (or should not be and it is not as I am aware) in a top journal. You need an explanation. If the explanation is lacking but the result is truly surprising or revolutionary (cold fusion, cure of up-to-then uncurable condition, faster than light travel, etc.) then you repeat it maybe 5-10 more times? Until that is completed, you may publish a tech report putting your stamp on this work.
Can someone tell me how to always play these clips? I normally use:
mplayer -dvd-device dir dvd://1 -vf ...
but occasionally the main feature is in section 2 etc.
Are these going to be in section 1 and 2 predictably? I want to update my script
so I do not miss these educational messages.
Thank you!
You suggest that Elop is intentionally driving Nokia to the ground.
It may sound like a concpiracy theory, but I agree and go even further: Elop is grooming Nokia for a Microsoft buyout.
There is still a way for Nokia to go down before that is feasible, my guess is another 18 months.