Comment Re:Can you say... (Score 1) 266
okay yes but you see
I was telling a joke
okay yes but you see
I was telling a joke
If you own millions in assets, I'm sure you've heard some advice to diversify, right? If you've got even half your assets outside the company, you've still got millions of dollars left.
Frankly, I don't care about a millionaire losing half their money because of their own stubbornness. They'll be fine.
So, if we accept that a "slippery slope" argument is valid, that will lead to "all or nothing" arguments also being valid?
Huh, good point. I might actually try that nail polish, though, so it was a little useful for me.
I usually hate Bennet's long-winded posts, mainly because he thinks he knows what he's talking about, but manages to be rather wrong most of the time.
This post is more like a "Here's some cool stuff!" - and he's right, a lot of it is pretty cool. If you don't really read the words and just skim the links, it's a pretty good article.
"crazy females"
Huh, I wonder why women don't like you. Probably because we're just addicted to bullying. It's like heroin for us, you know.
I don't think it's unusual or undesirable for a university to have a code of ethics they follow, even if it differs from the "will of the people" as it manifests through an aggregate of individual actions.
I also don't think it's fascism for a private school to have, you know, a code of ethics - I don't really see how MIT is a nationalist authoritarian government.
I do like the subhuman bit though. I'm now imagining myself tunneling beneath the earth, erupting out to snatch and devour shitty dudes.
It also sends a really clear message: "This behavior will not be tolerated." If sexual harassment causes your name and work to be disgraced - that's a pretty strong deterrent to people in academia.
So if you're considering the aggregate effect, you've also got to consider the aggregate improvement in the lives of students who now face less harassment and can learn in a less hostile environment.
Well, when your professor is sexually harassing you, it
Yeah, they're in cahoots. There are services out there that will contact you offering to magically drive up ad-clicks on your site (for a small fee, of course). I'm sure that some of the website owners think that they're driving actual users to the site, but... it's hard to imagine how anyone tech-savvy would not understand what they're doing.
Gotta spend money to make money, right?
It also takes time & energy to, you know, develop, maintain, and generate content for a website.
There's more to the costs of a website than just "how much electricity does the server use"
Stone Soup was the first roguelike I actually got into; and probably still the one I've sunk the most time into. Not remotely qualified to talk about whether or not it's good, but dang it's fun.
The containers aren't like full-fledged VMs - they're generally running only the processes they need. If you enter it & bring up top, you're quite likely to see 3 processes in there - one for top, one for your shell, and one for your actual app.
You're going to have a slightly larger footprint, yeah - I don't believe you can take advantage of shared libraries to reduce RAM usage (though... possibly in some cases. I'm not sure) - but it's much lighter than running a VM.
http://www.infoq.com/news/2014... if you want some more gory details.
Haha, I have read that and, predictably, found it pretty cool.
I mean, I'm a big fan of static linking, so that probably explains my enthusiasm for this. I haven't yet figured out how to statically-link an entire django project, though.
Factorials were someone's attempt to make math LOOK exciting.