Comment Re:Visible from Earth? (Score 1) 126
LOL
Hmmm
LOL
Hmmm
I tell this story to illustrate the truth of the statement I heard long ago in the Army: Plans are worthless, but planning is everything. There is a very great distinction because when you are planning for an emergency you must start with this one thing: the very definition of "emergency" is that it is unexpected, therefore it is not going to happen the way you are planning.
there's nothing like a real life emergency in programming but business culture is "get this done yesterday." no one can do that. but some programmers are very fragile and can only function according to one set of requirements/ work environment/ speed, and if you mess with that they get angry/ stressed/ tune out/ burnt out. while the "rock stars" can react to sudden and dramatic changes of requirement and need and crank out the changes relatively adroitly (not necessarily quickly). a sort of suppleness of mind and eerie lack of stress that's more about personality than training. and i say personality, and not training, because their code is a reflection of their personality: you can throw a curve ball at it from any direction and it can adapt without falling to pieces when "little" things (it's never little) change
your code is a reflection of how your mind works. which is your personality. and certain chilly stress proof people can generate flexible durable code that is almost like the redundancy and flexibility of logistics in war
Or maybe refund the money they've been given to maintain it, or the subsidies to expand it.
Sorry, but the telecom companies have been handed huge piles of cash to maintain this stuff
They weren't given that money to only invest in the most profitable stuff
Greedy, shortsighted corporations don't need to charge more to pay for that stuff
Mostly I think they've been lining executive pockets, and bribing politicians so they can keep doing the same crap.
No, most of that is porn
OK hotshot, how sure are you that the medium those *wonderful* answers are stored on hasn't deteriorated, resulting in us looking back on bad advice?!
Assume it will, or that it already has. Which, has more or less been in all those answers which came before.
Buy 4 HDs
If you have at least two backups of very recent vintage, and two of an slightly older vintage
Over time, assume even the ones you're still using.
In other words: Hint: The consensus recommendation was to pick at least two different media, and store them in a least two different geographical locations, then migrate to different media as technology improves.
Which is precisely what the GP said.
Don't assume you've made a static backup which will suffer from neither bitrot nor obsolescence. Plan accordingly.
This is literally a decades old strategy. The more important the data, the more discrete copies you keep, and the more regularly you do it.
Funny, and I want to have three open browsers so I can sandbox various activities from one another.
Who said you had to support it? Are you the support guy for the entire interweb or something?
Nobody is forcing you to use it or support it.
Firefox users who likewise prefer a browser with more rather than fewer features (but otherwise want to stick with Firefox) might also consider SeaMonkey, which bundles not just a browser but email, newsgroup client and feed reader, HTML editor, IRC chat and web development tools.
LOL
More seriously, where does Opera/this Vivaldi thing fall on the privacy end of the spectrum? Is it ad supported? Is it full of crapware?
If it isn't secure or trustworthy, WTF is the point? The last I saw anything from Opera was an Opera mini
I want the "advertisers and sponsors go to hell" browser, do we have that?
External HDs are cheap these days.
Set up a robocopy script to backup to an external. drive Periodically backup to a second external HD.
Periodically cycle the external HDs into your safe-deposit box at the bank.
Accept that every few years your external HDs get cycled out due to age.
Don't try to make some permanent archival solution which will rely on technology in the future working
I think your specific medium over the long term is less meaningful when you can buy a 3TB external HD for under $100
Nowadays, it seems like redundant, offline backups for stuff you deem important enough is fairly easy to do.
The advantage of a robocopy is it will only copy what's changed, so your static data doesn't add too much.
Economics isn't an ideology.
Bullshit, it sure isn't objective science, it's models, based on dubious assumptions which aren't reflective of anything other than the beliefs of the person who made them, and then using mathematics of dubious quality to "prove" what your ideology tells you.
Are you retarded or just ignorant?
Are you an asshole or a douchebag?
I'm saying that when people say "if you cut taxes it will stimulate the economy", that is a purely ideological position, not grounded in objective fact. And economics serves no purpose if it isn't down to implementing policy, which is inherently idological.
And again, it is like you are saying physics cannot be a science because there is many unproven theories that coexists.
No, I'm saying physics still boils down to actual objective reality, and in no fucking way shape or form does economics do that, and never has.
Frankly, you are an idiot.
Frankly, you're an asshole who thinks too highly of his own opinion.
So far you've failed to offer anything intelligent, just the cowardly ad hominem attacks of a worthless moron with nothing new to add.
So, I'll tell you what, here's a piece by someone who has a fucking Nobel prize in "economic science".
One problem with economics is that it is necessarily focused on policy, rather than discovery of fundamentals. Nobody really cares much about economic data except as a guide to policy: economic phenomena do not have the same intrinsic fascination for us as the internal resonances of the atom or the functioning of the vesicles and other organelles of a living cell. We judge economics by what it can produce. As such, economics is rather more like engineering than physics, more practical than spiritual.
There is no Nobel prize for engineering, though there should be. True, the chemistry prize this year looks a bit like an engineering prize, because it was given to three researchers - Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt, and Arieh Warshel - "for the development of multiscale models of complex chemical systems" that underlie the computer programs that make nuclear magnetic resonance hardware work. But the Nobel Foundation is forced to look at much more such practical, applied material when it considers the economics prize.
The problem is that once we focus on economic policy, much that is not science comes into play. Politics becomes involved, and political posturing is amply rewarded by public attention. The Nobel prize is designed to reward those who do not play tricks for attention, and who, in their sincere pursuit of the truth, might otherwise be slighted.
Why is it called a prize in "economic sciences", rather than just "economics"? The other prizes are not awarded in the "chemical sciences" or the "physical sciences."
Fields of endeavour that use "science" in their titles tend to be those that get masses of people emotionally involved and in which crackpots seem to have some purchase on public opinion. These fields have "science" in their names to distinguish them from their disreputable cousins.
So, seriously, fuck off and grow up.
Economics is descriptive how what complex systems involving humans do. But is is NOT measuring some innate natural properties of how that actually works.
As soon as economics goes from measuring and describing, and steps into applying policy
Not claiming I have the answers
Economics isn't a science, it's fucking ideology.
The idiotic policies of Alan Greenspan almost directly led to the housing bubble
Economics is NOT a fucking science and never has been, it's intrinsically linked to politics and ideology.
People who claim it is some kind of objective science are either lying to us, or to themselves. Science doesn't yield different outcomes based on your political leaning.
Grappa is Italian, you're thinking of Tsipouro -- even if they're mostly the same thing.
And you're only about the 4th person that I've ever encountered besides me who will admit to liking grappa -- I know old Italians who wince at the mention of it.
You know
Economics is as much ideology as it is "science" -- what you think will happen depends on what you believe happens. Economics is not some intrinsic natural law.
It seems like trained economists are just as likely to fuck up an economy as would be trained monkeys -- because at the end of the day you have shockingly little control over things, and probably less of an understanding that you claim. Let's not start pretending that economists actually know anything about the economy. They know what their ideologically driven view of economics tells them to they know.
I think calling economics a "science" is a complete joke -- because it's not.
Of course, the biggest thing facing Greece is they can't wave away their debts and their problems -- never been certain the austerity program was going to work for them, but they basically drove themselves into the ground and won't get out by telling Germany et al "thanks for the money, now piss off".
When you have no cash, and nobody is willing to give you credit
I suspect you could also use an unregulated trebuchet to launch something over a fence
LOL
One would hope you couldn't set such a thing up and not have anybody notice.
Otherwise, that could seriously change "modern" warfare. "Umm, general, they seem to be using things made of rope, wood, and stone
Hehe
Thanks
The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh