How did the Star Trek "Enterprise" communicate across the galaxy? I don't remember any specific mention of a method, though I guess today they'd say something about "quantum entanglement" or similar....
Nice, but it's hard to take "Rolling Stone" seriously.
Agreed. Ubuntu people are just as crazy as Mac zealots.
I have one "sticker" on my Mac. A piece of gaffer's tape over the glowing logo.
They're not childish--they're a signal of membership in a cult.
I don't believe it. It's just like those "peak oil" people. We just need to drill more; we can find more IP addresses.
He uses source control; he just doesn't have a _public_ one. So what?
Thanks! It would be nice to see support for real languages.
Here's a better video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsBak0oCgdY
"Everything"? Where's Erlang? Where's Lua?
So I wonder if we can trick Googlebot into doing computations for us? Maybye mine bitcoins! :-)
Another great Erlang essay by jlouis. The Erlang practice of letting things fail is also SOP for experienced implementors of any large SOA system. You just let things fail. If some process getting messages from a queue…
I watched the video and still have No Idea. Is it an app? Is it a browser plugin? Where does it store the data? Does it sync between machines?
How did the Star Trek "Enterprise" communicate across the galaxy? I don't remember any specific mention of a method, though I guess today they'd say something about "quantum entanglement" or similar....
Nice, but it's hard to take "Rolling Stone" seriously.
Agreed. Ubuntu people are just as crazy as Mac zealots.
I have one "sticker" on my Mac. A piece of gaffer's tape over the glowing logo.
They're not childish--they're a signal of membership in a cult.
I don't believe it. It's just like those "peak oil" people. We just need to drill more; we can find more IP addresses.
He uses source control; he just doesn't have a _public_ one. So what?
Thanks! It would be nice to see support for real languages.
Here's a better video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsBak0oCgdY
"Everything"? Where's Erlang? Where's Lua?
So I wonder if we can trick Googlebot into doing computations for us? Maybye mine bitcoins! :-)
Another great Erlang essay by jlouis. The Erlang practice of letting things fail is also SOP for experienced implementors of any large SOA system. You just let things fail. If some process getting messages from a queue…
I watched the video and still have No Idea. Is it an app? Is it a browser plugin? Where does it store the data? Does it sync between machines?