Comment So that's where they put them (Score 1) 256
We can finally visit our "cloud servers" while there
We can finally visit our "cloud servers" while there
hot enough so that the longest any spacecraft functioned on the surface was mere seconds;
The Soviet landers lasted more than a half hour. But they did require massive cooling systems.
What else do they need all that nuclear equipment for? There are other ways to generate nuclear power without that kind of material.
Seems MS and Facebook should then make a mutual search deal. You gotta pool resources to compete with Google in search-land.
As much as I hate Microsoft for all the crap they've pulled over the years, Google should have competition. Without competition they'll become......well, like Microsoft.
No pilot to keep conscious.
Pilots black out anyhow when they see the bill
Yeah, the dinosaurs got a really good view of one.
Whaddya mean? They made me put in just about every screw and peg on a bookshelf I bought, not just the "last one". I wish it was only the last few.
Note they couldn't pack it into a flat box if they did much of the construction themselves.
Preach it, brother.
Preaching is not "breakthrough persuasion technology". However, if somebody convinces the masses that "Jesus wants nuke plants", you may be on to something.
Find a gasoline stain that looks like Satan, post it on the Interwebs, and soon evangelicals will want alternatives. It works with toast and rusted grain silos.
How IKEA Patched Shellshock
By making the customers do most of it themselves.
Write it in a Babbage Analytical Engine simulator: the copyright has expired by now, and it's Turing Complete.
We really need a better term for "back-end developers", for what should be obvious reasons. Nerds have enough social cred problems as it is. Sometimes "server side" is used, but that doesn't quite cut it because some UI dev is also done on the server side in many cases.
I don't really understand your gripe. Slashdot covers many technology specialties. Very few article topics will fit the entire audience, and many will fit only a small subset. That's expected. I've seen embedded programming articles also, for example, which a web developer will typically not care about. Should web developers gripe about articles on embedding?
You seem to have a set of unstated assumptions about the domain of slashdot and the domain of its readers that doesn't match mine. Perhaps you are arguing there are too many articles related to web development compared to other domains. But web development is a large and growing domain such that it's a frequent area of change and growing pains, which is usually what "news for nerds" would cover. You don't see many articles on the COBOL language because it no longer changes very often, for example. That's not necessarily a bad thing; but it doesn't generate "news".
We may have to come to grips with the idea that it's just a hard sell. The long-term average death/illness rate may be much lower than say oil or wind, BUT people remember the "spikes" of accidents such as 3-Mile-Island.
It's just easier to sell an idea that kills lots of people gradually in a predictable rate than one that kills nobody for many years, but occasionally hiccups in a newsworthy way.
That's just the way it is. We can't change human nature, and mass nagging usually backfires. We probably have to just live with that fact unless somebody invents breakthrough persuasion technology.
It's rare that somebody is a jerk in all ways: we all have flaws in some area(s) or another, and being in certain situations magnifies them.
I'm glad Bill's good side is coming out now.
We in the west like to view people as either "good guys" or "bad guys", perhaps because it makes for more drama in media, which reinforces that view. But reality is often more nuanced.
Maybe if the art academy had accepted the young Adolf, he'd only be known as a "decent German artist of the mid 20th century". Disaffected by the art world, he turned to a different "career" instead.
Politics: A strife of interests masquerading as a contest of principles. The conduct of public affairs for private advantage. -- Ambrose Bierce