Comment Re:Like a plastic knife. (Score 1) 157
Half of the programmers writing mission-critical code are worse than average.
Half of the programmers writing mission-critical code are worse than average.
So you don't need a nanny compiler. Fine by me, C and assembler were among the first programming languages I learnt.
But when you follow that up by "and here's our nanny memory leak checker instead..." and you don't notice the irony, I'm not sure if I want to trust you with my pointers if one redirect throws you off...
If you're just shouting EE&E because somebody said the word Microsoft, then say that instead.
You finally got it.
Yes, I'm shouting "beware, they are thieves" before they actually took something - because they are, in fact, well-known thieves. This is the thing that's called "reputation" (just adding that since you actually seem to be new to the planet).
If they've done it a hundred times before, it is very likely that they'll do it again. It really is that simple.
I see no sign they intend to extinguish it.
You new here? I mean the planet?
Of course you don't. They never show their intention to extinguish until the first two are complete.
Oh no, you want to say that Microsoft is following its usual strategy, as they've done for 30+ years?
What a complete surprise! Shocker! Stop the presses...
If you so much as touch anything made by MS without having a plan B ready and waiting in the top drawer, you can't be helped.
Bones and teeth. No remains with fur, muscles, etc. as far as I'm aware.
I'm talking about the price paid, not the profit or losses incurred.
And, of course, a bit tongue-in-cheek.
Basically: Since campaigning in the US costs countless billions, we shouldn't be surprised that politicians are all bought. It's the only way to get anywhere.
them matching on a few phenotypic features
If that.
Given that we don't exactly have HD videos from 12,000 BC what they're doing is at best making guesses at what might be a few phenotypic features.
Well, the taxpayers pay $400,000 per year for Donald, for a total of 1.6 million.
His friends paid several times that in campaign contributions. So basically, everyone gets what they paid for.
Yes, but you can take any arbitrary direction - for example your own spin axis - and define that as "up" and then measure rotation relative to that and you should still arrive at a 50/50 distribution. Just the sign changes.
Yes, but...
Some careers are possible to enter from the side. Programming, writing, acting, whatever.
But some careers are impossible to enter like this. Medicine and law are the prime examples. You are legally forbidden to work in these fields if you can't show the proper degree. There's a couple others as well. And then there's the glass ceiling, where theoretically you could do a job, but unless you are incredibly exceptional, the people with the degrees will always be preferred.
It's easy to ascribe things to one cause, but that's rarely true.
Yes, there are a lot of people whom you should seriously look at and ask what exactly their career plans were when they decided to do gender studies or whatever.
Yes, the economy is in the dumpster and that obviously means a shortage of job openings.
Yes, Gen Z has a different attitude to work-life-balance than previous generations. (and, frankly speaking, my attitude to work would've been different as well if it had been clear from the start that I'll never be able to afford a house.)
But - studies show that only about half of the students end up in careers directly related to their field of study. There are some obvious lines - you can't be a lawyer without a law degree or a doctor without a degree in medicine - but in most other fields, there are students going on to different careers and workers who never studied it.
So 4 Million - that's the sum total of a bunch of causes, only some of which are within reach of the graduates to influence.
So when you buy or download a software, you expect all the books the coders used to learn with it, as well as everything they looked up on StackOverflow while doing it?
I don't see this as being completely different. In all other fields of life, we buy the final product. We understand that there are machines and workers in a factory producing it, but we don't expect to get those sent along.
Where are the open-source, local-only AI solutions?
In front of me, on the harddrive of my machine.
These things already exist and some of them have been around for quite some time. LM Studio, for example, or Ollama. They're even reasonably easy to use, an interested non-techie could figure it out.
More of them are coming out constantly. Local-only or local-first (i.e. with an optional choice to also query online sources) AIs are already fairly common. Asker needs to use Google before using
Polls have shown that most Americans oppose the time shifts but disagree on what should replace them...
Of course.
On anything that doesn't really matter at all, you will statistically find a near 50/50 split in opinion.
Just make a coin flip and go ahead. One or two years in the future, all those who wanted the other option will have forgotten about it, because frankly, nobody cares.
You can tune a piano, but you can't tuna fish. You can tune a filesystem, but you can't tuna fish. -- from the tunefs(8) man page