I bought a numbered print in 1993, the robot coming out of the egg and have it framed in my office, it's great!
This would be really out-of-this-world amazing if it had QuickAssembler's UI
"Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson
I would love something to reply to WhatsApp or other messages with a prepackaged response, something like "I'm driving", "In a meeting", it could be customizable from the phone
Nice, no Compile option though? Is it an interpreter? I tried a Hello, World, and the (Input,Output) after the program name choked it. Nice job!
They could be using some kind of format-preserving encryption, but then they would have needed an unhashed version of the password to generate this "phone input" field.
You could use the "Understanding the Linux kernel" book by Bovet and Cesari.
Perhaps nitpicking, but this is because of a bug in the leap second implementation, not in the leap second per se.
How about the old Casio PB-700 up to the PB-2000 that were programmable in Basic, C and Prolog?
Recently we talked in our OS class about the 68K and its lack of MMU, this article provides great insight on those days!
Oh yeah, and I have a Tinney signed print of the robot coming out of the eggshell. I also have the magazine.
As a CS student in Guatemala in the 80s, Byte was like news from the cutting edge of technology. We used to get like 5-10 copies for the only store that sold them, and they went fast. I had to literally keep up with…
HN should register under the .hn domain
The MIT guys have already created a port?/reengineering? of 6th edition, check out xv6: http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/6.828/2009/xv6-book/index.html
We have an IBM RS/6000 43P circa 1996 still running, doing production email services. No hardwaree problems at all!
I bought a numbered print in 1993, the robot coming out of the egg and have it framed in my office, it's great!
This would be really out-of-this-world amazing if it had QuickAssembler's UI
"Snow Crash" by Neal Stephenson
I would love something to reply to WhatsApp or other messages with a prepackaged response, something like "I'm driving", "In a meeting", it could be customizable from the phone
Nice, no Compile option though? Is it an interpreter? I tried a Hello, World, and the (Input,Output) after the program name choked it. Nice job!
They could be using some kind of format-preserving encryption, but then they would have needed an unhashed version of the password to generate this "phone input" field.
You could use the "Understanding the Linux kernel" book by Bovet and Cesari.
Perhaps nitpicking, but this is because of a bug in the leap second implementation, not in the leap second per se.
How about the old Casio PB-700 up to the PB-2000 that were programmable in Basic, C and Prolog?
Recently we talked in our OS class about the 68K and its lack of MMU, this article provides great insight on those days!
Oh yeah, and I have a Tinney signed print of the robot coming out of the eggshell. I also have the magazine.
As a CS student in Guatemala in the 80s, Byte was like news from the cutting edge of technology. We used to get like 5-10 copies for the only store that sold them, and they went fast. I had to literally keep up with…
HN should register under the .hn domain
The MIT guys have already created a port?/reengineering? of 6th edition, check out xv6: http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/6.828/2009/xv6-book/index.html
We have an IBM RS/6000 43P circa 1996 still running, doing production email services. No hardwaree problems at all!