Schrodinger's Bug
Nonsense. Absolute horse shit. This is a tax cut paid for in borrowing that will be paid later with...taxes.
> The debt is already so large that this barely affects the momentum. The idea that a 66% increase in the deficit "barely affects the momentum" is absurd reflects either your ignorance or your bad faith. Apply that…
He's coming off a crack-binge. Pay no mind.
Valuable for who? Open source (at the margin) is more valuable for everyone--except the inventor, for whom it is not as valuable. So the inventor keeps the design proprietary, and keeps more money for themselves. But,…
It's the simplest interpretation of the data we have.
The Bell Theorem shows that any local hidden variable theory wouldn't match the experimental data we already have. There's other options for getting around the weirdness of the Copenhagen interpretation that aren't…
> Law of physics implies a casual relationship in nature This is simply wrong. That is not what the term 'law' means in physics.
> It takes years of education before people realize that the known laws of physics are just approximations or historically refined by discovering new details. It's in high school chemistry textbooks. Typically in the…
It's been a long time since my QM course, but, assuming by unitary you mean deterministic, then the answer is that time evolution of a particle's state is NOT deterministic. It is probabilistic. For large collections of…
This sounds like semantic befuddlement (though, not on Wheeler's part; he was just engaging in wordplay). Physical laws are not 'laws' in the sense that nature is required to abide by them. They are simply features of…
Headline is super misleading--it's an electron app that wraps the web interface for Evernote. It's not its own application.
There are a lot fewer people applying for jobs local to me than there applying to jobs that will let me work remote. By a factor of over 100.
And full of people applying for them.
The two kinds of functions are also more clearly declared.
Whichever team published VS Code seems to be not evil, at least.
All zero of them.
This eruption has been going on for 35 years, and there hasn't been a mass evacuation yet. I wouldn't worry about it.
> Ordinary legislation only requires a 50% + 1 majority. That's not really true of any non-budgetary legislation (for now).
> I don't think that juries decide what's true and what's not. In a legal sense, that's exactly what they do. Juries are, by definition, deciders of fact, i.e. they decided what is legally true based on the evidence…
> We abolished slavery a few centuries ago. Slavery has never been abolished. It was simply made illegal in most places under most circumstances. By any definition of slavery there are more people in bondage today than…
Nothing that isn't wrong with metabolic syndrome and diabetes.
Oh, you sweet, summer child. There's a reason sweat shops and slave labor happen more in some places than in others.
If you don't understand the difference between proving software and proving civil engineering projects, you aren't qualified to be participating in a discussion on software liability.
It's also not done because it is mathematically impossible to certify software as 'bug-free' in the general case. Software isn't like civil engineering where you can mathematically prove that a design is sound.
Schrodinger's Bug
Nonsense. Absolute horse shit. This is a tax cut paid for in borrowing that will be paid later with...taxes.
> The debt is already so large that this barely affects the momentum. The idea that a 66% increase in the deficit "barely affects the momentum" is absurd reflects either your ignorance or your bad faith. Apply that…
He's coming off a crack-binge. Pay no mind.
Valuable for who? Open source (at the margin) is more valuable for everyone--except the inventor, for whom it is not as valuable. So the inventor keeps the design proprietary, and keeps more money for themselves. But,…
It's the simplest interpretation of the data we have.
The Bell Theorem shows that any local hidden variable theory wouldn't match the experimental data we already have. There's other options for getting around the weirdness of the Copenhagen interpretation that aren't…
> Law of physics implies a casual relationship in nature This is simply wrong. That is not what the term 'law' means in physics.
> It takes years of education before people realize that the known laws of physics are just approximations or historically refined by discovering new details. It's in high school chemistry textbooks. Typically in the…
It's been a long time since my QM course, but, assuming by unitary you mean deterministic, then the answer is that time evolution of a particle's state is NOT deterministic. It is probabilistic. For large collections of…
This sounds like semantic befuddlement (though, not on Wheeler's part; he was just engaging in wordplay). Physical laws are not 'laws' in the sense that nature is required to abide by them. They are simply features of…
Headline is super misleading--it's an electron app that wraps the web interface for Evernote. It's not its own application.
There are a lot fewer people applying for jobs local to me than there applying to jobs that will let me work remote. By a factor of over 100.
And full of people applying for them.
The two kinds of functions are also more clearly declared.
Whichever team published VS Code seems to be not evil, at least.
All zero of them.
This eruption has been going on for 35 years, and there hasn't been a mass evacuation yet. I wouldn't worry about it.
> Ordinary legislation only requires a 50% + 1 majority. That's not really true of any non-budgetary legislation (for now).
> I don't think that juries decide what's true and what's not. In a legal sense, that's exactly what they do. Juries are, by definition, deciders of fact, i.e. they decided what is legally true based on the evidence…
> We abolished slavery a few centuries ago. Slavery has never been abolished. It was simply made illegal in most places under most circumstances. By any definition of slavery there are more people in bondage today than…
Nothing that isn't wrong with metabolic syndrome and diabetes.
Oh, you sweet, summer child. There's a reason sweat shops and slave labor happen more in some places than in others.
If you don't understand the difference between proving software and proving civil engineering projects, you aren't qualified to be participating in a discussion on software liability.
It's also not done because it is mathematically impossible to certify software as 'bug-free' in the general case. Software isn't like civil engineering where you can mathematically prove that a design is sound.