Comment We need Indian drug companies (Score 5, Funny) 255
I think it's terrible that the US would try to keep more people from getting access to effective, affordable remedies, such as beta blockers.
I think it's terrible that the US would try to keep more people from getting access to effective, affordable remedies, such as beta blockers.
Talk - action = nothing.
Slashdot is a conversation site. The talk IS the action.
Here's some more of it: FUCK BETA.
But before they use that collider they'll want to get it out of Beta first.
Hell, might as well use the opportunity to shill my own stuff (seems like that's what
I was one of the first 5,000
That said, I'd like to personally invite the whole, babbling mess of you to come on over to The Register at www.theregister.co.uk.
We're different. We're a little weird. We like to write headlines that pass people off. A lot of the site is pitched from a UK perspective, which means Americans sometimes don't get it, but we actually have an international staff with offices in Australia and San Francisco (where I work).
And even if the headlines sometimes get a little out there, the reporting is actually mostly pretty straight -- although we don't mind calling bullshit when it's warranted. Anyway, at least we DO reporting, unlike
What's more, compared to any other tech site I've ever worked for, we actually do have a lot of really articulate, whip-smart commenters on our stories. I think you would like some of what you read there. We have some trolls and dimwits, too, but that's par for the course.
Fair warning: our comments ARE moderated by our editors. That's probably never going to change, owing in part to the truly ludicrous UK libel laws, where we can be held responsible for the contents of your comments if we "publish" them. But most of what we pull are just pointless personal attacks and spam.
And as a bonus for
Come check us out. We might be kind of an acquired taste but once you acquire it you might be hooked.
I don't really see what good these autonomous vehicles will do. They won't do anything to help get rid of Slashdot Beta, so what's the point?
Probably because it's unhealthy for tech to exclude 52% of the population based on gender.
But that wasn't the proposition. The proposition was how to "get more women interested in open source." If you're talking about excluding women, then fine, if that's actually happening then that's something worth talking about. We shouldn't be excluding people. But why is it necessary to "get people interested"? If they're not interested, then fine, let 'em pursue other interests. It's a big world with lots of options.
"Inventing the Internet" gives you the same rights over the international Internet as "inventing the English language" gives over English speakers.
I think I lost your point. Are you saying that England has the right to decide if it's spelled "colour" or "color" in the US?
Perhaps you're playing stupid on the Internet, or maybe you're just thick, so I'll spell it out for you.
If the USA wants to spell colour "kulor", England can't stop them.
England "invented" English. USA can do with it what they want.
USA "invented" the Internet. The world can do (or ought to be able to do) with it what it wants.
I believe that is what the +5 Insightful AC above you was getting at.
No unions? Sign me up!
Yet conservatives may be shocked to learn that their idol Reagan was once a union boss himself. Reagan was the only president in American history to have belonged to a union, the AFL-CIO affiliated Screen Actors Guild. And he even served six terms as president of the organized labor group. Additionally, Reagan was a staunch advocate for the collective bargaining rights of one of the world’s most famous and most influential trade unions, Poland’s Solidarity movement.
And Reagan said this regarding unions:
By outlawing Solidarity, a free trade organization to which an overwhelming majority of Polish workers and farmers belong, they have made it clear that they never had any intention of restoring one of the most elemental human rights—the right to belong to a free trade union.
So you modern conservatives even make Ronald Reagan look like a leftist. And guess what? He was no leftist.
That ought to give you reason to consider your blind partisanship, but something tells me that would be highly unlikely.
Well, that's true, too.
My understanding is that the most common use case for both NaCl and ASM.js is to write your code in, of all things, C.
To clarify your last statement a bit, TypeScript is designed as a superset of JavaScript. All valid JavaScript is valid TypeScript. All you have to convert your project is say "my project is in TypeScript now," and you can then start adding TypeScript features to your code -- or not -- as you see fit. That's as opposed to Dart, which really is a different language with a different syntax and you have to start over.
The point of C is that it's fast as hell and gives you almost complete control.
No, assembly language is fast as hell and gives you complete control. The point of C is that it gives you almost as much control but makes it easier to build and maintain large systems without you being some kind of semirobotic idiot savant. In other words, C IS a "dumbed down" language, just like some of the other ones people are complaining about.
The best approach, therefore, is to build a compiler back-end that targets *both* ASM.js *and* (P)NaCl.
Or just compile your code twice, using two different back ends? I don't see much wisdom in building a compiler that tries to do two things at once.
Is the word "platform" officially over? My fucking toaster is a bread-browning platform.
"Ninety percent of baseball is half mental." -- Yogi Berra