Comment Re:Try deepfried at least once (Score 1) 189
Take the easy way out, and buy a precooked fried turkey. I tried Bojangles this year, and was moderately impressed.
Take the easy way out, and buy a precooked fried turkey. I tried Bojangles this year, and was moderately impressed.
The approach Google is taking with their self-driving cars is all wrong. The self-driving car should not look like a Smart car or a Fiat, it should look and work like a limo. I should be able to get comfortable and relax so I can use my time productively, carry on a conversation, sleep, or whatever else happens in the back of a limo.
I know not these "inches" of which you speak.
Unmaintained windows packages? Are you using ActiveState? Try Strawberry Perl instead. It comes bundled with a Mingw32 build of GCC, which might seem like overkill, but it has been able to build from source any package I have thrown at it. Just use cpan.bat instead of ppm.bat.
Shit is what's left after all the sorting is done and the useful parts have been sent where they're needed.
There are 10 kinds of people
Here, here. Also, maintenance is a good way to learn how things can break, and from that you can learn how to build things that are less likely to break in the first place. One thing that people who work with me hear over and over again is "Fix it so it stays fixed."
Perl was a polyglot before it was cool. Hipster Perl.
Watch this.
Hey ya'll, watch this!
Really? Battlestar Galatica and no Doctor Who?
Really, Star Wars twice and no Doctor Who?
Really? Two Star Wars and neither of them was "Punch it, Chewie"?
Damnit. I have that stuck in my head now. Not the song, just that one line.
In Mexico, they have Quatro de Julio.
Yes, I remember the movie. I even remember the TV spinoff. And yes, you are that old.
Here, here. In the late 90's, my employer heard a sales pitch from Citrix, who was doing remote desktop on Windows NT, and I was like "Oh yeah, we did stuff like this back in the day. Windows is just now catching up?"
At NCSU, over the summer of 1989, the CSC department replaced a crapload of 68000-based four-terminal boxes running the UCSD p-system with DEC workstations running Ultrix and X11R4 with massive (for the time) 21 inch monochrome monitors and three button meeces. The basement of Leazar hall was filled with these things, and they showed up in other labs and other departments as well. Your home dir was NFS mounted so you could log in to anyone of them. There had previously been various other unix boxen for more advanced classes, but you logged in to those using a dumb-ish VT100 terminal or similar, so it wasn't my first encounter with unix (If you could dial in from home with a terminal emulator and a 1200 baud modem, you were pretty lucky).
Goodies like xinfest and neko were available, and I remember finding an
Damn. Now I feel old.
Make sure your code does nothing gracefully.