Comment beer and revolution (Score 1) 633
"Give my people plenty of beer, good beer and cheap beer, and you will have no revolution among them" - Queen Victoria
"Give my people plenty of beer, good beer and cheap beer, and you will have no revolution among them" - Queen Victoria
I was just looking at this for a much smaller pile of data (aroudn 300GB) and came across this http://ldiracdelta.blogspot.com/2012/01/detect-duplicate-files-in-linux-or.html
If you're sadistic you can hand them Playing at the World.
Um, no not really. That is one way to do an RPG.
For me and my group the story is what happens when you look back at what you just did.
I don't Narrate. I DM. I kill, maim, and destroy.
Save or Die is shit that happens.
After all, it's just graphite and wood pulp.
3d6.
In order.
For the reall fucking hard core.
The biggest problem with that anti-vax movement is that the herd immunity protects not just the unvaccinated that the infected mingle with both those that get the disease third hand. People like young babies that can't get a vaccination because they are too young.
Babies that wouldn't normally get whooping cough or measles or such because they were exposed to it because a sibling or parent (who was probably vaccinated) was exposed to a disease they then carried home.
If we're starting to stop people from smoking in bars because of second hand smoke we sure as hell can force most everyone to be vaccinated because of third hand infections.
But there is greater flexibility with Pegasus and Virgin Galatic's vehicle.
The available launch times should be much greater than a standard rocket launch.
There is a difference as well in the carrier aircraft.
Pegasus looks to be using a commercial aircraft, Lockheed Stargazer per Wikipedia. It has to be retrofitted to accommodate Pegasus.
Now, Virgin Galactic has WhiteKnight2 which is purpose built to carry a craft bound for suborbital, or orbital flight.
There is a trade-off there. The Stargazer could in theory be cheaper since it is one of hundreds but has an increased cost for retrofit.
WhiteKnight2 might cost more because it's unique, but it can handle getting its payload to altitude better, theoretically.
Python and Perl make great data analysis tools.
They have a plethora libraries to handle things: Numpy/Scipy for Python and PDL/GSL for Perl.
They can access FORTRAN and C libraries as necessary for either performance or legacy needs.
THey are probably best because they are high level languages, very platform neutral, and cost signficantly less than other "serious" data analysis tools/languages.
That is an average of $7642/year/student.
In Indiana, it is about $5,000 (for K-6). That is what is used to pay for the teacher's salary, any specialists (like art, special ed, etc.), any administrators (like a receptionist, principal, etc.), any bonds that need to be paid, any utilities, the list goes on.
And you wonder why there are 30+ kids to a classroom? Even if you cut the administration to the bone you still have lots of expenses that a school has to cover as a result of federal, state, and district mandates.
Stop the MCP!
De-resolution is the only solution
EOL
At one school I know of they handle this by giving report cards that aren't grades but rather written evaluations of each student and what they're doing well and what they need to work on, which take whatever factors they are aware of into consideration. Takes a lot more effort for all involved, but it's generally fair and it avoids the problem of a kid being judged by a system that has no way to account for his or her particular obstacles to success.
Exactly.
That it what progressive education is.
Not handing out worksheets and testing the little buggers all the time.
The motivation is the learning process and the acquisition of knowledge in and of itself.
My wife is a student teacher supervisor/lecturer (she helps make teachers) and she is big on discouraging gold starts, food, and other "material" incentives.
She tries to teach her students not to use those crutches.
As you can imagine, it can be a bit of an uphill battle for her.
Not to defend the lameass TSA, but no devices have been detonated under the TSA's watch.
That being said at least 2 instances there have been explosives on planes. The TSA didn't stop them passengers did.
I would say they haven't stopped a single, serious threat in their existence.
Nowadays a bomber won't target the planes, the bomber will target the lines at the security checkpoints.
The rest of your post I can 100% agree with.
An interesting part of the DIY Drones stuff.
http://diydrones.com/profiles/blog/show?id=705844%3ABlogPost%3A44817
Winds might be sort of a problem.
I wonder how easy it would be to make a DIY drone using a powered paraglider.
Well, it does look like it has been asked:
http://diydrones.com/forum/topics/uav-paraglider?xg_source=activity
Cool.
Is there a hyphen in obsessive compulsive disorder? >.>
Remember, if you have it bad enough it's not OCD but CDO.
"I am, therefore I am." -- Akira