Comment Re:HOME ownership is key (Score 1) 688
That is NOT the majority of America or Europe. Especially not Europe.
+...and the Leaf is NOT $20K. It's $30K and up.
Europeans drive things like Fiats and Smartcars and then park them perpendicularly.
That is NOT the majority of America or Europe. Especially not Europe.
+...and the Leaf is NOT $20K. It's $30K and up.
Europeans drive things like Fiats and Smartcars and then park them perpendicularly.
I am not poor and I am no longer a student. So I don't have to drive a cheap crappy car. Thus, this car gets judged based on what I already have and have had for decades already.
It's a premium priced econobox which likely explains adoption rates.
It also looks like an underpowered subcompact.
I might consider test driving it in 5-10 years when it's time to replace the current vehicle. Probably would not be comfortable driving it though.
Never heard of an egolf.
This sounds like an exposure problem. Available options are few and far between.
Plus many people have brand strong preferences. They may not consider Brand X under any circumstances regardless of how green and trend one of their models is. I would at least consider a VW but would never touch a Chevy.
As development for Wing Commander came to a close, the EMM386 memory manager the game used would give an exception when the user exited the game. It would print out a message similar to "EMM386 Memory manager error..." with additional information. The team could not isolate and fix the error and they needed to ship it as soon as possible. As a work-around, one of the game's programmers, Ken Demarest III, hex-edited the memory manager so it displayed a different message. Instead of the error message, it printed "Thank you for playing Wing Commander."
They're still dog fighting. There's even an educable show about this. Some of that included the last Iraq war.
...except they haven't "wasted a trillion dollars". The trillion dollar figure is for the cost of the plane for it's entire lifetime including the 20 or 30 so years from today it's supposed to remain operational.
Only the very lowest levels of programming as a profession are so simple that you can get away with being a completely untrained bricklayer. Once you actually get to the point of building anything remotely interesting, ideas you would have been exposed to in academia quickly become relevant.
Even in the more interesting skilled skilled trades you can't get away from "academic" instruction of some kind.
Sure. Lets pander to the flavor of the month corporation just because they are the trendy thing today. Let's forget about the DECADES of work and progress that has gone into the collective body of Free Software. Let's also give a big "fuck you" to all of the nice contributors while we are at it.
It's Apple that's the newcomer playing the jerk imposing restrictions that are entirely unnecessary.
Freedom is not a Mad Max free-for-all where Apple can try to be the boss of the Thunderdome.
You must be a sociopath then, or work for one.
That's really the only reason to not use something with a copyleft license.
All the GPL does is enforce that "everyone plays nice" with a shared resource. If you can't do that, then you're an anti-social jackass that should be shunned.
Stick to the LGPL and it's not even any more viral than anything else.
Was it all uniform though? As an IT guy, I can relate to black listing certain types of updates and preventing Microsoft from just force feeding updates to everyone.
It's the perpetual problem of Microsoft not really being responsible with the hardware vendor really being the one on the hook. They are likely to suffer for Microsoft's mistakes.
...true. But this is much more like the "Pink Slime" controversy over there in the States. People were not aware of what was going on and reacted quite badly when the cat was finally let out of the bag.
Legal warfare against the relevant whistle blowers in the news media commenced.
The offending meat companies claimed damages.
The problem with cable is that they escalate the number of commercials in a given time frame. This means that even new prime time shows end up being butchered as soon as they go into syndication. Older stuff (like classic Trek) can get mutilated to the point of being unrecognizable.
It's not just about how insulting or stupid or manipulative the commercials are. Content is altered.
Since there is nothing tying your OS to your browser to your search engine the old retort is still a valid one. ANYONE can get in the game. If Google is dominant, it's more like McDonalds than Microsoft.
Browsers can even send you to a different default search engine if you're too lazy to try something else on your own.
All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin