When the pilot comes on board, he becomes the Ace of Trumps. You know, "only one captain on a ship". What would be the point of a local expert coming on board if the non-expert captain was still in charge?
Maybe you are confusing general operation of the ship with the act of "driving it". No doubt while the pilot is aboard, the captain can still order a mate to swab a deck. But when it comes to "Since we're late can we speed up to make up time?" that is only the pilot's call. Who, of course, would not speed up.
Since we're playing the "my dad is better than your dad" game, it was one of my closest friends who was both a ship's captain (for decades) and a ship's pilot (for years more). Pilots make more, while doing less, so he retired at that position.
I agree. For me, with audio editing, an SSD turns loads & saves into "word processor speed" actions, instead of "I have time to get a coffee" ones.
I haven't been brave enough to trust the SSD with my swap file, but am getting there. In part because the OS gets badly swapped out when you work with very large files -- stupid design. If it didn't, I wouldn't bother.
Similarly, I will be moving browser cache directories pretty soon. Opera (v12) seems to get particularly sluggish when things are all swapped out. Strangely, Firefox is almost no different. Ah, the voodoo science of modern computers.
The idea of setting up my mom with an SSD is pretty hilarious. I only just got an SSD, to speed up editing 1TB audio files. Only got a 3 times speed up, FWIW (on an, I suppose, old Q6600 system). Oh, did I mention that Nana is 90?
No, Einstein did different things with each of SR and GR. Wikipedia elucidates. The way things stood, after GR, was that there could be an ether, or not, and it didn't matter -- to GR.
The supposed "disproving" of the ether was merely that it wasn't detected across a number of experiments. But what the "it" was also changed over time. The ether has been proposed as a solid, liquid and gas (and now pure energy, in Spring-And-Loop Theory).
The debate about the ether is by no means over. Nor has "it" been proven to not exist. Certain possible ethers have not been detected. That is all.
Also known as methane hydrates, there is no use of the word "explosive" on the mh page. It has a density lower than water, so tends to bubble up (and then evaporate). Being denser than air, it could accumulate at times and potentially explode in that scenario. But not underground, creating giant holes.
My father was a great story teller. I regret I never recorded audio of any of his stories.
My father sang a few songs in his final months. Those made it to cassette, and I digitized those. Priceless.
I would record yourself doing something you love. Take a walk, and record your thoughts on it. Go for your favorite drive and narrate why you like it so much. Go to the library and give a guided tour. Sniff a rose, and then talk roses.
If you have a lot of "core thoughts", record those.
If you have a great laugh, get that recorded.
And through all those recordings, intersperse your core values, your love...for your daughter, life, your work, space travel or organic zucchini.
I've logged a bit of face time with my replacements. I always emphasize that I would want them to be happy, not sad, when they think of me.
What is interesting is that Irish people are some of the nicest people I have ever met. It is a bit of a mystery why they are so nice, given how war-torn their two countries are, and that potato famine thing. Feherty is must-watch golf TV. Conan is one of the greatest late-nighters. Then there's one of the greatest 'stand-up' comics: Dave Allen.
- an envious Canadian
You try to assign a lot of emotional words to what might motivate me daily.
It is also possible for me to simply know that it is healthy for me to get better at something. But if I don't get better at, let's say, riding a bike, well at least I rode a bike that day. Riding is healthy and I can still pat myself on the back and carry on. If I improve I go "cool". I may wonder why I am slower one day, and I may wonder why I am faster another. But I don't have to get emotional about it. Riding a bike is already a win.
Aggression is for those who believe in win-lose. Clearly the 1% fall into this category, hence our war-torn world.
Poincare's work habits have been compared to a bee flying from flower to flower. Poincare was interested in the way his mind worked; he studied his habits and gave a talk about his observations in 1908 at the Institute of General Psychology in Paris. He linked his way of thinking to how he made several discoveries.
The mathematician Darboux claimed he was un intuitif (intuitive), arguing that this is demonstrated by the fact that he worked so often by visual representation. He did not care about being rigorous and disliked logic. (Despite this opinion, Jacques Hadamard wrote that Poincare's research demonstrated marvelous clarity. and Poincare himself wrote that he believed that logic was not a way to invent but a way to structure ideas and that logic limits ideas.)
Einstein first conceived of relativity intuitively. Then had David Hilbert help him with the math. Causing Hilbert to actually conceive the math of relativity first -- though Hilbert graciously always said it was Einstein's theory. And Einstein had two assistants to help with the math as well.
- Pedro Ferreira's "The Perfect Theory"
And of course Newton had to invent the math to do his thing. Translation: he conceived of it first, then created the math for it second.
If you are looking for more than a laundry list, this article offers a bit more.
pre-systemd : systemd :: INI files : the Registry
One thing wrong, or at least muddled...
When the pilot comes on board, he becomes the Ace of Trumps. You know, "only one captain on a ship". What would be the point of a local expert coming on board if the non-expert captain was still in charge?
Maybe you are confusing general operation of the ship with the act of "driving it". No doubt while the pilot is aboard, the captain can still order a mate to swab a deck. But when it comes to "Since we're late can we speed up to make up time?" that is only the pilot's call. Who, of course, would not speed up.
Since we're playing the "my dad is better than your dad" game, it was one of my closest friends who was both a ship's captain (for decades) and a ship's pilot (for years more). Pilots make more, while doing less, so he retired at that position.
True on water as well. The ship's pilot is absolute commander.
Unfortch on this machine I only have 4GB of RAM, so have to have a swap file as well -- or else, random-loss-of-data pays a visit.
BTW, I moved my Opera browser cache to the SSD a couple of hours ago. Insert VBG here.
Make that 1GB...
I agree. For me, with audio editing, an SSD turns loads & saves into "word processor speed" actions, instead of "I have time to get a coffee" ones.
I haven't been brave enough to trust the SSD with my swap file, but am getting there. In part because the OS gets badly swapped out when you work with very large files -- stupid design. If it didn't, I wouldn't bother.
Similarly, I will be moving browser cache directories pretty soon. Opera (v12) seems to get particularly sluggish when things are all swapped out. Strangely, Firefox is almost no different. Ah, the voodoo science of modern computers.
The idea of setting up my mom with an SSD is pretty hilarious. I only just got an SSD, to speed up editing 1TB audio files. Only got a 3 times speed up, FWIW (on an, I suppose, old Q6600 system). Oh, did I mention that Nana is 90?
No, Einstein did different things with each of SR and GR. Wikipedia elucidates. The way things stood, after GR, was that there could be an ether, or not, and it didn't matter -- to GR.
The supposed "disproving" of the ether was merely that it wasn't detected across a number of experiments. But what the "it" was also changed over time. The ether has been proposed as a solid, liquid and gas (and now pure energy, in Spring-And-Loop Theory).
The debate about the ether is by no means over. Nor has "it" been proven to not exist. Certain possible ethers have not been detected. That is all.
Also, the length. I am genuinely curious who...here or anywhere else...has time (or interest) to read all that.
Good choice.
My personal metric will be any web page that doesn't contain the string "silentcoder".
Also known as methane hydrates, there is no use of the word "explosive" on the mh page. It has a density lower than water, so tends to bubble up (and then evaporate). Being denser than air, it could accumulate at times and potentially explode in that scenario. But not underground, creating giant holes.
Ironic that TFA is full of typos.
Some experts say not to worry because technology has always created new jobs while eliminating old ones ones, displacing but not replacing workers.
The company claims it can weave that data into a compelling narrative that on a skill level an experienced writer can do
can automate delivery of low-level anesthesia in applications like colonoscopies at the fraction of the cost
I never could have predicted have the things that have come to play ten years ago
My father was a great story teller. I regret I never recorded audio of any of his stories.
My father sang a few songs in his final months. Those made it to cassette, and I digitized those. Priceless.
I would record yourself doing something you love. Take a walk, and record your thoughts on it. Go for your favorite drive and narrate why you like it so much. Go to the library and give a guided tour. Sniff a rose, and then talk roses.
If you have a lot of "core thoughts", record those.
If you have a great laugh, get that recorded.
And through all those recordings, intersperse your core values, your love...for your daughter, life, your work, space travel or organic zucchini.
I've logged a bit of face time with my replacements. I always emphasize that I would want them to be happy, not sad, when they think of me.
Namaste
Will My Little Pony be available on YouTube Kids, or will it continue to just be for adults?
By the way, Australia, France, South Korea, and Portugal drink more alcohol per capita than Ireland. According to a recent Listverse "top 10".
What is interesting is that Irish people are some of the nicest people I have ever met. It is a bit of a mystery why they are so nice, given how war-torn their two countries are, and that potato famine thing. Feherty is must-watch golf TV. Conan is one of the greatest late-nighters. Then there's one of the greatest 'stand-up' comics: Dave Allen.
- an envious Canadian
You try to assign a lot of emotional words to what might motivate me daily.
It is also possible for me to simply know that it is healthy for me to get better at something. But if I don't get better at, let's say, riding a bike, well at least I rode a bike that day. Riding is healthy and I can still pat myself on the back and carry on. If I improve I go "cool". I may wonder why I am slower one day, and I may wonder why I am faster another. But I don't have to get emotional about it. Riding a bike is already a win.
Aggression is for those who believe in win-lose. Clearly the 1% fall into this category, hence our war-torn world.
And succeed.
I compete with myself, trying to be a better person today than yesterday. Does that mean I am aggressive with myself?
The way to a better world is self-improvement. Aum.
$15.99
- Wiki
Einstein first conceived of relativity intuitively. Then had David Hilbert help him with the math. Causing Hilbert to actually conceive the math of relativity first -- though Hilbert graciously always said it was Einstein's theory. And Einstein had two assistants to help with the math as well.
- Pedro Ferreira's "The Perfect Theory"
And of course Newton had to invent the math to do his thing. Translation: he conceived of it first, then created the math for it second.
True if one replaces "scientists" with "non-intuitive scientists".
The greats -- Newton, Poincare, Einstein, James Clerk Maxwell -- were intuitive.
Or don't lick your lips. Problem solved.