Comment Re: If you're not familiar... (Score 1) 334
>The eight security guards, I can kind of understand.
You must live in the USA. The rest of the world goes... WTF?
>The eight security guards, I can kind of understand.
You must live in the USA. The rest of the world goes... WTF?
I dont remember anyone wanting a tablet until they brought it out.
Steve Jobs would disagree with you
People from the 1980s would laugh at that comment.
+1
>An emacs clone
Like emacs?
I haven't seen that phrase here in years!
I would be very interested to hear what you use it for, and what the benefits are to you. ('Fun' is acceptable
>So my question is: Why would anyone want to be an early adopter anymore?
Youtube views. Remember how many people bought the Apple VR headset, and then returned it
>In my college classes at a prestigious school, well over 15 years ago, only a tiny fraction of the students in class could actually code to any reasonable degr
Back in 1983 at university, I saw the same. I tought one foreign how to solder. My dad had taught me ten years earlier.
Some people do engineering degrees because they love the subject, some just see it as a career path. Both were very obvious
I first learned COBOL (books only) then BASIC, then assembly language, then Pascal and Fortran (the last two at university)
I worked in Pascal first, then 5 years later discovered C. Took me a while to get used to it, but I'm still happy with it.
+1
+1 insightful.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
From a very long time ago. Ben decodes the list of bad words and prints them out, so NSWF.
Dick Van Dyke is whitelisted. So some normality.
Agreed. Except in airports
"People should have access to the data which you have about them. There should be a process for them to challenge any inaccuracies." -- Arthur Miller