Comment Re:mathematica? (Score 2) 216
No, he reimplemented Common Lisp with a Mathematica syntax reader.
No, he reimplemented Common Lisp with a Mathematica syntax reader.
jealous much?
You see, the Tesla is not only a dangerous incindiary monster, but it is a stealthy and vindictive one. It waits until you go to bed, and if you forgot to plug it in, it gets really peeved, combines all the little laser projectors into one beam, bounces it off the driving mirrors, and spews a beam of flaming destruction out the front window, to start your house on fire!
Who ignited it?
Nice reputation for extreme safety you've got there, Mr. Musk. It would be a shame if something were to happen to it.
Not if the deal came with speech restrictions.
The scam goes like this: Start your Tesla on fire. Hold out for 5x the price of the car. If they decline, take it to the press and sue.
Your notion of a "real problem" is, quite frankly, a far worse problem.
I would point out that you can be put in a federal prison if you don't obey the waitress on an airplane.
I hope they ban you from opening your mouth in public. E-mail and texting should handle it.
> However, the government is still constrained by the constitution
Ha! ROFLMAO at that.
The Airline can tell me whatever they like, and I can tell them whatever I like, and they can go frack themselves.
The government are the ones who threaten you with prison if you talk to someone while you are on an aircraft -- but only if you are not wealthy enough for a private charter.
I see, so it is an unconstitutional law.
I found the notion that this was common sense and courtesy to be amusing. If you have to threaten people with prison, then it is neither common sense nor courtesy.
It''s pretty damn uncourteous to put people in prison.
I propose a Presidential Medal of Freedom, and endorsement for the Nobel Peace Prize.
You seem to be missing a dose of reality. A quality product at a discount price typically cannot compete with established manufacturing, distribution and advertising channels. It requires deep pockets and order of magnitude value improvements to succeed against an entrenched player. That's why we don't have flying cards and a Mars colony. Competition is so inefficient as an economic organizing principle that it is literally killing millions every day. Perhaps the only worse principle is central planning.
To lump Java with Ruby demonstrates utter disregard for actual performance in favor of ideological blinders.
> you also need to use 2-pass algorithms to compute Mean Absolute Deviation
Only naively. One pass will suffice.
"It is better for civilization to be going down the drain than to be coming up it." -- Henry Allen