Comment Re:Meh. (Score 3, Informative) 163
While not nearly as dramatic, my understanding is that flu kills many more people than Ebola does.
But death rate aside - who wants to be laid up in bed for a week with fever and body aches?
While not nearly as dramatic, my understanding is that flu kills many more people than Ebola does.
But death rate aside - who wants to be laid up in bed for a week with fever and body aches?
Sorry, but "I just don't like you" is not a federally defined form of discrimination.
Clearly you are not familiar with the freakshow that is the NSA.
You would love it at NSA. Assuming you walk your talk and 1) actually get stuff done, and 2) you aren't a degenerate.
If it makes you happy, do it.
BSOD is an error trap screen. The kernel was going to die, the error was caught, the crees was displayed, and the system then halts.
Saying that the BSOD is not a kernel problem is possibly correct, but not certain.
American infrastructure was untouched during WW2, hence we still have draped lines on sticks in many places. Cutting edge tech... from the 1880's.
>> French idea of relief is a bottle of wine and watching women walking by the café.
That does it: I'm moving to France!
A graduate project is not nearly as fluid as a paying gig. It is agreed up front at the start of the project and generally this is what is produced. Not so in the real world.
Then, your work is graded. Maybe not the best thing for your academic career, but in many cases you can take a C and move on. I business this is called "failing" and this means all of a sudden you and your employees have nothing to eat and all the lights turn off in your house.
There are no advisers. There are no facilities or resources available to you save for what you can provide for yourself. The deadline can abruptly change due to funding and competition (along with 1000 other reasons).
These are just some of the reasons why academic work is not a great measure of real world experience. Mind you I am not saying acedemic work is useless, but I definitely differentiate between the two.
Coding standards: pick anything and stick with it. Use Google's. Why not? (Haha I note they are using svn.)
http://google-styleguide.googl...
https://google-styleguide.goog...
These types of decisions are many times arbitrary and one valid approach rarely is any better than another.
You haven't even started and you are already bogged down on "coding standards" and "best practices."
In The Beginning only one thing matters: robust code that does what you want it to very well. Maintainability? Pah - you need a future for that to matter. Best practices don't matter if you are bankrupt, or have a product nobody will touch.
...why cat food cans generally have pop-tops, but tuna fish cans generally don't?
Project Loon strikes me this way: they are missing something obvious.
Do Not Hire.
Sort of like the Neosocialism that America had to stamp out in the 1940's!
Actually, planning is the first to die.
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.