Even if safety is "covered", doesn't anyone notice how often abnormal road situations occur? (Pay attention next time, you'll see what I mean.) Anything out of the norm would snarl these things and all the traffic behind them, daily.
What I don't understand about such a system is that you can't trust it by itself, so its worth seems dubious. No matter what it tells you, you pretty much have to confirm the information in another way - it seems too easily hack-able or prone to error (whether it really is or not). And talk about a single point of failure/Russian hacking concerns...
I fear this system will cause more problems than it's worth.
To me, working for someone is also an unwritten, social contract. If there's something work-related that they'd like to know, I think it's obligatory to report it.
I am not a fire inspector at my job, but if I see something dangerous in the building, I'll report it, just as no one directly asked me to shoo a mosquito off his shoulder.
And should you want to play Atari's 1979 version ("Lunar Lander"), I was lucky enough to
find one last year. (I am not connected to this place, but had a nice time.)
Isn't the video game industry huge right now (and its real-time, online component)? Mobile latency/ping will never compare to that of wired in quantity or consistency.
Yes; I bought a C compiler there -
Watcom's (now free), after I read it was used to create Doom and I wanted to learn more about C. This was in the late 1990s, and I think I paid ~ $100. This was back when you could buy the Netscape web browser in a box off the shelf at Best Buy for $40ish!
Notably, the UI, shell, document format, organization structure, and IDE are all one and the same. Your shell is a text editor where you can embed drawings and link them to other documents, and your documents can be compiled and run with a built-in JIT compiler that also provides its own debug environment.
This, not surprisingly, sounds Commodore 64-ish. For the younger folks, if you turn on a Commodore 64, within 3 seconds you have an OS prompt. From that prompt, you can interact with the OS via commands, including directly viewing/editing contents of registers and memory. You can interact with disk drives, or any other hardware connected to the machine, for that matter. And you can load and execute (and even edit certain) applications. Or, you can just start typing/adding BASIC language lines to the built-in BASIC interpreter. It's not a bad paradigm to mimic, really.
For those who haven't worked with governments before, I've seen it go like this: Someone in the government (local or otherwise) wants to deal only with vendor X (a friend, nepotism, he thinks theirs is the best product, etc.). With cooperation from the government person, vendor X writes a bidding specification that is very detailed, so that all other bidders are excluded.
The laughing bothered my mother, she mentioned, and I didn't really notice its volume until she pointed it out. Coincidentally, she took a trip to the studio where it's shot, and they said during the tour that they have microphones all over the audience and use the 'best' laughter during the show.
I suffered a lifting injury that supposedly gave me a hiatal hernia (stomach). A hiatal hernia can irritate the vagus nerve, causing it to malfunction. The vagus nerve is responsible for many functions, including keeping the heart rate low/normal. Ever since the injury, I suffer from anxiety attacks and have caused my heart rate to spike just by swallowing something hard (candy), as it seemingly puts further pressure on that nerve as the hard food goes down into the stomach.
There have been studies showing that simple abdominal massages can alleviate seemingly unrelated things like atrial fibrillation - I presume this nerve to be a source of such issues.
Since such a concept is not wholly embraced by the medical community at large, I wonder whether your partner has such trouble. And, to the article, perhaps women, with their extra abdominal organs, are more prone to such nerve impingement and the related fantastic symptoms, with which male doctors may be less familiar.
Just out of cutiosity,
Typo aside, I see what you did there!
Even if safety is "covered", doesn't anyone notice how often abnormal road situations occur? (Pay attention next time, you'll see what I mean.) Anything out of the norm would snarl these things and all the traffic behind them, daily.
What I don't understand about such a system is that you can't trust it by itself, so its worth seems dubious. No matter what it tells you, you pretty much have to confirm the information in another way - it seems too easily hack-able or prone to error (whether it really is or not). And talk about a single point of failure/Russian hacking concerns...
I fear this system will cause more problems than it's worth.
FYI, I hear that inside of microwave oven and clothes-washing/drying machines block signals. The microwave oven worked for my cellular test.
To me, working for someone is also an unwritten, social contract. If there's something work-related that they'd like to know, I think it's obligatory to report it.
I am not a fire inspector at my job, but if I see something dangerous in the building, I'll report it, just as no one directly asked me to shoo a mosquito off his shoulder.
Reminds me of this video.
And should you want to play Atari's 1979 version ("Lunar Lander"), I was lucky enough to find one last year. (I am not connected to this place, but had a nice time.)
Building tools to make soldiers more deadly is a far cry
Don't worry, it won't happen. Let me count the ways...
Copenhagen interpretation is still taught as the orthodox interpretation of quantum mechanics
Perhaps in some of the more backward, remote realities, but it has long been abandoned in the more sophisticated worlds, Marty!
Isn't the video game industry huge right now (and its real-time, online component)? Mobile latency/ping will never compare to that of wired in quantity or consistency.
Yes; I bought a C compiler there - Watcom's (now free), after I read it was used to create Doom and I wanted to learn more about C. This was in the late 1990s, and I think I paid ~ $100. This was back when you could buy the Netscape web browser in a box off the shelf at Best Buy for $40ish!
What a strange age we live in...
Notably, the UI, shell, document format, organization structure, and IDE are all one and the same. Your shell is a text editor where you can embed drawings and link them to other documents, and your documents can be compiled and run with a built-in JIT compiler that also provides its own debug environment.
This, not surprisingly, sounds Commodore 64-ish. For the younger folks, if you turn on a Commodore 64, within 3 seconds you have an OS prompt. From that prompt, you can interact with the OS via commands, including directly viewing/editing contents of registers and memory. You can interact with disk drives, or any other hardware connected to the machine, for that matter. And you can load and execute (and even edit certain) applications. Or, you can just start typing/adding BASIC language lines to the built-in BASIC interpreter. It's not a bad paradigm to mimic, really.
I can see why you don't care about sunlight. Don't you work in one of those black spheres that open from the top?
He claims the office is sitting on his remaining applications, and is waiting for him to die.
Me too; and I'm only 50!
I wrote a kids game that had random text that would display on screen. I simply kept vowels from displaying.
For those who haven't worked with governments before, I've seen it go like this: Someone in the government (local or otherwise) wants to deal only with vendor X (a friend, nepotism, he thinks theirs is the best product, etc.). With cooperation from the government person, vendor X writes a bidding specification that is very detailed, so that all other bidders are excluded.
The laughing bothered my mother, she mentioned, and I didn't really notice its volume until she pointed it out. Coincidentally, she took a trip to the studio where it's shot, and they said during the tour that they have microphones all over the audience and use the 'best' laughter during the show.
100% of illegal immigrants have broken the law, and thus, have committed a crime. (See what I did there?)
Dang; I'm sorry to hear that. It's a shame you couldn't have gone back.
entertainment.theonion.com/moviepass-attempts-to-increase-profitability-by-no-long-1828394840
Well that's good. Thanks for the reply.
I suffered a lifting injury that supposedly gave me a hiatal hernia (stomach). A hiatal hernia can irritate the vagus nerve, causing it to malfunction. The vagus nerve is responsible for many functions, including keeping the heart rate low/normal. Ever since the injury, I suffer from anxiety attacks and have caused my heart rate to spike just by swallowing something hard (candy), as it seemingly puts further pressure on that nerve as the hard food goes down into the stomach.
There have been studies showing that simple abdominal massages can alleviate seemingly unrelated things like atrial fibrillation - I presume this nerve to be a source of such issues.
Since such a concept is not wholly embraced by the medical community at large, I wonder whether your partner has such trouble. And, to the article, perhaps women, with their extra abdominal organs, are more prone to such nerve impingement and the related fantastic symptoms, with which male doctors may be less familiar.
Will someone post Vader's 'pray I don't alter the deal further' quote? I'm too lazy to type...
Except copying is not theft.
Sure it is; copyright theft is the theft of the right (control) to copy.
While I'm impressed with the "learning" aspect, humans have no chance in such games against "Head shot!" "Head shot!" "Head shot!"