I work in embedded and I absolutely review it. If nothing else, for learning.
>And the ones with built-in CRTs had issues wherein the cathode of the CRT was DANGEROUSLY CLOSE to the main PCB. If you weren't careful cracking that puppy open -- zappo! Fried motherboard, possibly fried you! I'm…
>IMO, both Boeing and NASA are under quite a lot of pressure to not require further tests from Boeing because there are just enough Atlas Vs (the rocket that Starliner launches on) for Boeing to complete it's…
Minor nit (for me, at least): An assembler is a tool. Assembly is a language. Though not assembly language, I think that www.ultibo.org is a cool embedded development environment for the Pi.
Mathematics for the Million is a really good book.
Ozric Tentacles for me. With the exception of two songs that I can think of in their 30-album catalog, there are no vocalizations. Just trippy psychedelic space rock. It may not work for everyone, but it puts me in the…
I would recommend "But How Do It Know?" by J. Clark Scott.
I came here to write basically this. I agree, and by the way, "wantrepreneur" is perfect.
Yes. I wrote my first code for hire at age 14, started professionally at age 22, and I'm 53 now. Still innovating and contributing as a technical guy. I've made it clear I'm not interested in management.
I was wondering the same thing!
Agreed. WGU has been a good fit for me.
I wonder who bailed first?
This is awful news. Too young.
I think he misspelled "Blondie".
Me too. Also, there are some sites where LastPass could never manage to find the login fields and didn't fill them correctly or at all. I've yet to see Bitwarden screw this up.
No, I'm not. Family health issues.
WGU?
No one will believe me, but I had this feature on a BBS I wrote back in about 1986 or 1987. I cannot prove it because the code no longer exists. I had a problem user that kept posting junk to the forum. I deleted things…
In 1962 when Grumman was awarded the contract for the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM), Thomas Kelly was promoted to be the lead engineer. He was 32 or 33. He was 40 when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. There's an episode of…
A while back this was talked about on a podcast - can't remember which one, and they said it took 1 photo per second. I'm not sure if they were being truthful or just saying it for illustration.
WGU
Cool! I can't wait to show a colleague at work - he worked at Smith Engineering back in the day for Jay and Ed Smith. He worked on a few games for the Vectrex.
Yes! Abend, lol.
Aw man, I'm with you on that one. Turbo Pascal was incredible. Delphi 3, 5, and 7 were incredible too!
70's and 80's here. Big fast printers. I know, who does massive code listings or memory dumps anymore? I feel that if I had one, I'd be using it all of the time, though.
I work in embedded and I absolutely review it. If nothing else, for learning.
>And the ones with built-in CRTs had issues wherein the cathode of the CRT was DANGEROUSLY CLOSE to the main PCB. If you weren't careful cracking that puppy open -- zappo! Fried motherboard, possibly fried you! I'm…
>IMO, both Boeing and NASA are under quite a lot of pressure to not require further tests from Boeing because there are just enough Atlas Vs (the rocket that Starliner launches on) for Boeing to complete it's…
Minor nit (for me, at least): An assembler is a tool. Assembly is a language. Though not assembly language, I think that www.ultibo.org is a cool embedded development environment for the Pi.
Mathematics for the Million is a really good book.
Ozric Tentacles for me. With the exception of two songs that I can think of in their 30-album catalog, there are no vocalizations. Just trippy psychedelic space rock. It may not work for everyone, but it puts me in the…
I would recommend "But How Do It Know?" by J. Clark Scott.
I came here to write basically this. I agree, and by the way, "wantrepreneur" is perfect.
Yes. I wrote my first code for hire at age 14, started professionally at age 22, and I'm 53 now. Still innovating and contributing as a technical guy. I've made it clear I'm not interested in management.
I was wondering the same thing!
Agreed. WGU has been a good fit for me.
I wonder who bailed first?
This is awful news. Too young.
I think he misspelled "Blondie".
Me too. Also, there are some sites where LastPass could never manage to find the login fields and didn't fill them correctly or at all. I've yet to see Bitwarden screw this up.
No, I'm not. Family health issues.
WGU?
No one will believe me, but I had this feature on a BBS I wrote back in about 1986 or 1987. I cannot prove it because the code no longer exists. I had a problem user that kept posting junk to the forum. I deleted things…
In 1962 when Grumman was awarded the contract for the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM), Thomas Kelly was promoted to be the lead engineer. He was 32 or 33. He was 40 when Apollo 11 landed on the moon. There's an episode of…
A while back this was talked about on a podcast - can't remember which one, and they said it took 1 photo per second. I'm not sure if they were being truthful or just saying it for illustration.
WGU
Cool! I can't wait to show a colleague at work - he worked at Smith Engineering back in the day for Jay and Ed Smith. He worked on a few games for the Vectrex.
Yes! Abend, lol.
Aw man, I'm with you on that one. Turbo Pascal was incredible. Delphi 3, 5, and 7 were incredible too!
70's and 80's here. Big fast printers. I know, who does massive code listings or memory dumps anymore? I feel that if I had one, I'd be using it all of the time, though.