But it does have the arrows, which are useful for many applications. It would be ideal if there was a "pro" HHKB with arrows.
When the tomography method is well developed, couldn’t this be use to scan the neural structure of a live brain? (i.e., to upload a brain)
SSRN posts anything (no peer review). It has the same function as arXiv. The only issue I see with moving to arXiv right now is that currently arXiv only accepts papers on topics such as physics, math, and CS. For arXiv…
alias ..='cd ..' alias ...='cd ../..' alias ....='cd ../../..' alias .....='cd ../../../..' alias ......='cd ../../../../..' # search history (??) and processes (???) alias '?=fc -li 1' alias '??=fc -li 1 | grep ' alias…
I was surprised to learn that there's a Lisp Machine emulator. I googled a little bit but could not find good installation intructions. Can anyone explain how to install this emulator on a linux computer?
Interesting! Are there screenshots available?
But it does have the arrows, which are useful for many applications. It would be ideal if there was a "pro" HHKB with arrows.
When the tomography method is well developed, couldn’t this be use to scan the neural structure of a live brain? (i.e., to upload a brain)
SSRN posts anything (no peer review). It has the same function as arXiv. The only issue I see with moving to arXiv right now is that currently arXiv only accepts papers on topics such as physics, math, and CS. For arXiv…
alias ..='cd ..' alias ...='cd ../..' alias ....='cd ../../..' alias .....='cd ../../../..' alias ......='cd ../../../../..' # search history (??) and processes (???) alias '?=fc -li 1' alias '??=fc -li 1 | grep ' alias…
I was surprised to learn that there's a Lisp Machine emulator. I googled a little bit but could not find good installation intructions. Can anyone explain how to install this emulator on a linux computer?
Interesting! Are there screenshots available?