Comment Imaginary mass or imaginary energy? (Score 1) 1088
From analyzing gamma, wouldn't a speed greater than light imply the neutrino has either imaginary mass or imaginary energy?
From analyzing gamma, wouldn't a speed greater than light imply the neutrino has either imaginary mass or imaginary energy?
Haskell will lose it's cool when someone writes a real program in it and not just code examples.
Actually, a major Perl 6 implementation, "Pugs", was written in Haskell. This is one reason Perl 6 has some Haskell features in it.
Thanks for this thoughtful response. But:
5. Indeed, at least AJAX enables somewhat sane masking of this, but the only-one-request-per-response character of the protocol means a lot of things cannot be done efficiently. If HTTP had allowed arbitrary server-side HTTP responses for the duration of a persistent http connection, that would have greatly alleviated the inefficiencies that AJAX methods strive to mask.
Well... what's wrong with using HTTP 1.1 persistent connections? They do allow multiple arbitrary HTTP responses over a single connection, efficiently.
I'm coming here late, but after reading the comments I still don't see the problems with HTTP. There does seem to be a lot of misunderstanding of the protocol and its history, though.
There are lots of alternatives. I like my own CGIProxy, but there's also Tor, Glype, PHProxy, UltraReach, etc. etc. Some of these have been around since the 1900's.
Land lines are laid with significant cost to our "commons", i.e. rights-of-way, etc. But similarly, the EM spectrum, and therefore wireless bandwidth, is a part of our commons too.
Don't know if you were getting at this, but wireless companies have certainly *not* made their whole business with no cost to the rest of us. It's perfectly reasonable to regulate them.
Hmm, I seem to recall Eric Schmidt (Google CEO) saying the same thing a few years ago. However, when someone at CNET published personal info about him that was found only through Google, there was quite an uproar.
So, I wonder what we can find out about Mark Zuckerberg?
Here's an earlier article about the case, by Elinor Mills at CNET.
"I am, therefore I am." -- Akira