Comment Re:A good point (Score 1) 267
Question: is some other language actually replacing Ada for aerospace, DoD projects, and other mission-critical type projects, or is it you just don't want to work on those projects anymore?
Question: is some other language actually replacing Ada for aerospace, DoD projects, and other mission-critical type projects, or is it you just don't want to work on those projects anymore?
http://citeseer.uark.edu:8080/...
They already have options that they worked on back in 1993.
putting QWERTY on the screen is stupid, you have to use a different input method, the clock face is the one that makes a lot of sense.
I was under the impression that Ada is still widely used in many mission-critical systems. For example, the latest Boeing planes' software (777 and 787) is nearly all written in Ada. I haven't heard about another language making inroads in those applications, but I suppose it's possible. More likely IMO is that the relative percentage of mission-critical software has shrunk compared to the explosion of commercial software.
Keep in mind language "popularity" is very industry-specific, so it's often a bit misleading to look at global rankings of language popularity. For example, in my own industry (videogames), C++ is completely dominant for game code, C# is very popular for tools, and Lua is popular as an embedded scripting language. If you look at Lua on it's own, it typically ranks pretty low compared to most languages, but there's no doubt it would be much higher if constrained to just my industry.
Because making it look for ANY device means I can insert another USB device and then disconnect yours.
Just set up a script on the machine looking for a specific USB device, start shutdown if the device is not present. This is pretty common stuff, hell my old Lenovo laptop has a smartcard slot in it that would do the same thing if the card was removed.
In fact if you look you can find the same thing all over the place for the last decade on many hacking sites, even back in the late 90's this kind of stuff was on the "scene" I had back to back modems in telcom rooms inside boxes that if the box was opened it dumped 110V into the modem logic boards so that when discovered they would self destruct.
Most "hackers" today probably dont even own a buttset.
Were you trying to say:
"LOL, nei, (th)að var ekki augljóst að "here" ((væri?)) Ísland og að (th)ú værir íslensk. En ((??????)) Google Translate get ég látið eins og hálfviti á tveimur tungumálum. Ef gert er ráð fyrir auðvitað að Slashdot ((sé ekki að flækja Unicodeið?))"
That is:
"LOL, no, it wasn't clear that here is Iceland and that you were were Icelandic. But (????) Google Translate I can come across like an idiot in two languages. If one assumes of course that Slashdot isn't screwing up the Unicode"?
If you want to write in Icelandic here, the only letter you need to swap out to prevent Slashdot from mangling it is thorn, just write it as TH or something.
Hmm, quick test... áéíóúöæðÁÉÍÓÚÖÆÐ - everything but the thorns should be in there.
What on Earth was that? I can make out portions of what you wrote through the mangled bits but not all of it.
I'll reiterate: People here think it's a ridiculous product. The page is stupid marketing to foreigners. Yes, there are separate accent and apostrophe keys (in case you're curious, here's what an Icelandic keyboard layout looks like). Hákarl (the fermented shark you refer to) isn't eaten commonly, it's actually fairly rarely eaten (though some people do like it). Most of the foods you'd consider weird are rarely consumed, like sheep heads, skate, etc, often associated with a particular festival or whatnot. Probably the only things you'd find weird that are eaten fairly commonly are horse and fish jerky (harðfiskur). Lamb is commonly eaten here but you probably wouldn't find that weird. We also have a lot of dairy products you don't have but I don't think you'd find most of them that weird. Anyway, probably the most commonly-eaten food here is pizza
Whale is eaten here but rarely. Nearly half of the catch consumed in Iceland is eaten by tourists (a large percentage of which, I should add, come from America). Also I'm continually surprised by the percentage of Americans who criticize Iceland for whaling but don't know that America whales too, and no small amount (producing thousands of tonnes of whale meat per year). Yes, they're "natives" whaling, but 1) it's no less traditional for Icelanders to whale than it is for Alaskan natives, 2) Alaskan natives use modern equipment for whaling too, including chasing them down in speedboats, killing them with modern equipment, and dragging them on shore with backhoes; and 3) Alaskan whales end up no less dead than Icelandic ones. None of the Icelandic whale populations are threatened.
Anyone who wants to discourage whaling over here, a few tips.
One, don't come out with the self-righteous stuff, because it doesn't fly. Not only does the US whale too, but receiving lectures on morality from a country where a majority of the population supports torture and who engages in all sorts of obscene human rights abuses and whose domestic livestock are mostly raised in factory farms in horrible conditions doesn't exactly come across well.
Secondly, know that any overt pressure is just going to cause backlash, and the more overt, the more the backlash. Many of you may see for example Paul Watson as a hero. Here he's seen as a ecoterrorist; he literally sent people in to sink ships right in the public harbour. If you want to be taken seriously, you need to distance yourself from these sort of people. You don't make friends by talking up people who come in and wreck up the place.
Third, understand the local perspective. It's not only that they've been eaten traditionally since Iceland was settled (indeed, the word for "beached whale" also means "jackpot" or "godsend", because in the old days it could mean the difference between life or death for a whole town). It's that they live free out in the open ocean, growing up their whole lives unhindered by man (except when, say, a NATO ship uses a super-powerful anti-sub sonar in the area or whatnot
Fourth, there are actual arguments you can make that have effect, and have on their own been discouraging whale consumption - but which foreigners who oppose whaling rarely make. Probably the foremost of these is the health issue. Whales, being top predators, tend to have dangerously high levels of heavy metal and organic pollutant contamination. If you want to make someone feel uncomfortable about eating whale meat, point out how much mercury and lead they're eating in that serving. There are also lesser arguments you can make that may or may not have effects on the person, depending on the individual - intelligence (but you better be well versed in the scientific literature, unbacked claims won't fly), for example, or how long it takes a whale to die versus other types of animals slaughtered for meat - but depending on the person, that may or may not be seen as a good argument. But the toxin contamination issue will have an effect on pretty much everyone.
(also, realize that not everyone here eats whale at all, and most people who do eat it only rarely)
Lastly, focus on the tourists. They come in for just a couple days and yet a large chunk of them order whale while they're here. Many of them oppose whaling back home, but it's as if when they come here their strict "morality" goes out the door, in the interest of "trying new things". I don't think they realize that they eat such a large percentage of the Icelandic catch, or that they somehow disconnect from where the meat comes from. There's a campaign here called "Meet Us, Don't Eat Us", encouraging whale watching instead of eating whale meat, and I think that's a very good strategy. The whale watching industry is economic counterpressure to the whaling industry.
(As a side note - I say all of this as a vegetarian).
Amm var (th)að ekki augljóst að ég bý á Íslandi (th)egar ég skrifaði orðið "here"? Og meira að segja fólk borða hákarl ekki oft. Og ég er meira að segja grænmetisæta.
Reyndu að lesa betur.
This is obviously a story about Icelandic whaling.
What's wrong with Icelandic whaling?
(Also, I don't know how to spell
They calls them like they sees them. They're whale biologists.
(And the fifth reason whales kill is for the sheer fun of it. )
DAZ activator is cleaner and does not report you by trying to activate.
Oh god, it's rare to see such bad English here. Maybe they got my ex's brother to write that page
Ah, the good old days of the web as it was in 1995? (*boggle*)
Have you set your browser to identify as a desktop browser?
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