Yeah, reading the comments, I was surprised how personally some people seem to take it. >> has to be a lie - they haven't died from lack of sleep C'mon guys, you can't be serious?!
Umm.. maybe? I'll wait and see. Not that I have much of a choice with the current hardware availability issues..
I'd insta-preorder a cooler running, less powerful, fanless version.
Chaos Group does some cool work in Haskell: https://www.chaos.com/all-products
> Well, it won't happen. One can dream, no?
> perfectionism is doing things the right way and make the best out of the limits you encounter This is 'being a reasonable homo sapiens'. Perfectionism is having absurd expectations and refusing to do anything unless…
It's the game industry way. Diversity this, inclusiveness that, but when you want to go on holiday for Orthodox Easter instead of Catholic Easter, we have a problem. And you realize it's all pandering and saving face in…
I thought about it. Maybe it's a cultural difference. Maybe you're right, at least when it comes to right now and American society. Sorry if my comments seem crude or inconsiderate.
And I expect decent counterarguments, but here we are.
The creation of such laws is only a matter of (perhaps very long) time. You think this is an "arbitrary" viewpoint? Fine, give me your best argument why what John Deere is doing is "good".
I don't think having a monopoly should be a requirement to take legal action against nasty practices in general. If somebody is beating his wife, should that be ignored because, you know, she can move out?
It's a 100% pure lottery. I'd easily answer some of the questions, but for others I stand no chance without prep time. For example, I've re-learned implementing a self-balancing binary tree at least 3 times in the past,…
If I start a side project, I find myself wanting to work on it instead of my daily job. But if I make the project my daily job, I want to work on something else. So no side projects for me, please. And I know plenty of…
Ordered by chance of decline (IMHO): 1. Netflix (~50% chance) - I feel it's only bundled with the rest of FAANG to make it sound better. In any case, HBO/Disney/Apple/whoever producing a cultural phenomenon like "Game…
I'd pay for a search engine where I get to customize this kind of stuff.
I will move to a part-time job and start a physics degree. There are many crazy things coming up in science, and I want to be a part of it.
The amount of time it takes to learn all that is like 15 minutes. And it's one-time investment.
It's not the size, it's how you use it.
Reminds me of that early Facebook game where you could "buy" your friends, and every time someone buys them, they become more expensive. (with extra steps)
Or centuries. Back in late 17th century, people thought the Ottoman Empire will fall apart any moment now, but the "falling apart" took like 200+ years.
You monster.
When Niels Bohr was on a visit to Princeton, he wanted young Feynman's personal input, because he knew Feynman would tell the truth rather than be intimidated into agreeing with every word.
It's one particular search engine partnership cough cough.
Unlike the concrete-and-glass boxes, it makes you feel things, which is already a plus in my book.
It has less hackers, I'd give it that. But yeah, in every other conceivable way the old BNET was miles ahead.
Yeah, reading the comments, I was surprised how personally some people seem to take it. >> has to be a lie - they haven't died from lack of sleep C'mon guys, you can't be serious?!
Umm.. maybe? I'll wait and see. Not that I have much of a choice with the current hardware availability issues..
I'd insta-preorder a cooler running, less powerful, fanless version.
Chaos Group does some cool work in Haskell: https://www.chaos.com/all-products
> Well, it won't happen. One can dream, no?
> perfectionism is doing things the right way and make the best out of the limits you encounter This is 'being a reasonable homo sapiens'. Perfectionism is having absurd expectations and refusing to do anything unless…
It's the game industry way. Diversity this, inclusiveness that, but when you want to go on holiday for Orthodox Easter instead of Catholic Easter, we have a problem. And you realize it's all pandering and saving face in…
I thought about it. Maybe it's a cultural difference. Maybe you're right, at least when it comes to right now and American society. Sorry if my comments seem crude or inconsiderate.
And I expect decent counterarguments, but here we are.
The creation of such laws is only a matter of (perhaps very long) time. You think this is an "arbitrary" viewpoint? Fine, give me your best argument why what John Deere is doing is "good".
I don't think having a monopoly should be a requirement to take legal action against nasty practices in general. If somebody is beating his wife, should that be ignored because, you know, she can move out?
It's a 100% pure lottery. I'd easily answer some of the questions, but for others I stand no chance without prep time. For example, I've re-learned implementing a self-balancing binary tree at least 3 times in the past,…
If I start a side project, I find myself wanting to work on it instead of my daily job. But if I make the project my daily job, I want to work on something else. So no side projects for me, please. And I know plenty of…
Ordered by chance of decline (IMHO): 1. Netflix (~50% chance) - I feel it's only bundled with the rest of FAANG to make it sound better. In any case, HBO/Disney/Apple/whoever producing a cultural phenomenon like "Game…
I'd pay for a search engine where I get to customize this kind of stuff.
I will move to a part-time job and start a physics degree. There are many crazy things coming up in science, and I want to be a part of it.
The amount of time it takes to learn all that is like 15 minutes. And it's one-time investment.
It's not the size, it's how you use it.
Reminds me of that early Facebook game where you could "buy" your friends, and every time someone buys them, they become more expensive. (with extra steps)
Or centuries. Back in late 17th century, people thought the Ottoman Empire will fall apart any moment now, but the "falling apart" took like 200+ years.
You monster.
When Niels Bohr was on a visit to Princeton, he wanted young Feynman's personal input, because he knew Feynman would tell the truth rather than be intimidated into agreeing with every word.
It's one particular search engine partnership cough cough.
Unlike the concrete-and-glass boxes, it makes you feel things, which is already a plus in my book.
It has less hackers, I'd give it that. But yeah, in every other conceivable way the old BNET was miles ahead.