Comment Re:Doesnt matter (Score 0, Flamebait) 150
You live in a terrifying world of your own creation. Really surprised you don't vote Republican - they keep you sage you know!
You live in a terrifying world of your own creation. Really surprised you don't vote Republican - they keep you sage you know!
You don' t have a Tag Heuer. You have a $50 battery powered quartz watch with a very expensive Tag Heuer sticker on it. A real, Automatic Movement Tag has about a 48 hour reserve, after that it needs to be worn, wound or placed in a winder.
Not the two markets overlap much, but there are a lot of watches out there that won't run for more than 48hours....
And back on topic, this thing looks really good. I don't care about the health stuff that much, but the smart watch features look great.
You believe the status quo must be kept as is, even in a shifting global economy.
Oh, so we're free to buy goods and housing at third world prices? All the CEO's that make more than $500k a year have been fired and replaced with MBA's from India? No and no you say? Then it sounds like the "global economy" is still really a "capitalist crock of shit".
Other than locally grown food, the price of durable goods is pretty consistent around the world. I've been there, I know. So your strawman "third world pricing" falls apart pretty fast. Do you have any example of this pricing disparity? If you find any, yes, you are free to purchase and import at will.
And yes there are tons of MBA's from India over here. My MBA class (class of '07) was roughly 1/3 China, 1/3 India and 1/3 north america/europe. That mix is typical for most top end MBA programs. Some go back to India/China, some stay here.
Perhaps your problem is you don't really understand what "global" means, or appreciate the benefits you get from it.
He makes about 1/3 less than I do. In a free market economy someone really good should command what I can command.
No, in a free market economy you would both be making *his* wages. What you are advocating for is a protected economy - you want the government to put rules in place (or to maintain/enforce existing ones) to ensure artificially high wages for your particular skill set. You believe the status quo must be kept as is, even in a shifting global economy.
Who is your canadian wireless provider? Because that is what we are discussing here. And how many minutes do you get for that?
bennet is the like opposite-universe man. The sky is green, grass is blue, he read it on the internet so it must be true!
Maybe you should follow the instructions on their Tools page:
Speed Test
We have the following speed tests
Flash (Adobe) download/upload speed test
Accurate for tests of residential DSL and cable connections
Java download/upload speed test
Capable of higher speed testing, for example, fiber
Mobile browser Speed and Latency Test (http://i.dslr.net/iphone_speedtest.html)
Javascript Speedtest, for mobile full featured browsers (iPhone, Android and so on)
How are people not aware of DSLReports and their speed tests? And how could this possibly make
Also, your wi-fi sucks. Get a cable if you want to know what your real speed is.
If you spent more money, buy way more expensive gear, buy a real rack, throw in a patch panel, do the crossover thing on it, patch it all in you can get 91MBps! The fools!
I wouldn't do more than this for a house - why would you?
Do a masters at a better school - you can do one in a year and it will hide your weak undergrad. I have an associates, a horrific undergrad upgrade to bachelors and a big buck masters, and it definitely opened doors for me. Just having access to a careers center at a top graduate school - they know so many people, who know people, etc. When I get hired, it's the skills learned at the Associate level that people find most valuable....
Those with less than perfect grades might go on to dream up blockbuster films like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg or become entrepreneurs like Steve Job"
If the C students are that creative, they'll find a way w/o college anyway, so why admit them?
The college application process is not meant to find a needle in haystack. Statistically speaking, your C student is more likely to be delivering pizza than founding Pixar.
So all windows software is garbage...including the makers of this suite called "Office". Would you be so kind as to call Microsoft for me? I am busy calling every other developer on the world
Building complex apps without coding doesn't seem like a useful goal. At some point you have to express the program logic and coding has always proven to be the best way.
The dividing line between graphical tool and actual code seems to have been a shifting one over the years. So when you go to a new environment or language where there's a substantial GUI component to building an app, the desire to see it all in code is strong. What actually happens when you add that button? I expect to be able to do it either through code of GUI and if they can't tell me what the GUI did in code, then I'm left clueless as to the underpinnings and so it becomes hard to think through the implications of design decisions.
I tried Swift recently. Swift was easy enough. But Swift+Xcode was impenetrable.
My micro processor prof insisted that C was an abomination and that code was easier to follow in native assembly. (Mostly Motorola, some TI)
There is a big chunk of people who have no desire to see the assembler, or the massively abstract C++ code that created it. Anyone who uses Access for example. I had a tool Palm Toolbox that made simple apps for PalmOS way back when. It was limiting, because I know better, but you could do a lot without ever looking at the real code.
Be prepared for multiple variations of the Fart Machine!
Absolute nonsense. Moodle is for managing content and it happens to have an optional plug in to monitor viewers ('students') progress.
But as others have noted, it is not the platform that is the problem, it is getting and keeping fresh content that matters. Any platform with good content would work.
...thanks for cherry picking the worst part of every review. Most reviews seem to like it, appreciate it, but are on the fence about the size and form factor.
Where there's a will, there's a relative.