Comment Re:It's funny (Score 1) 341
The reductio ad absurdum is obvious.
Sad, and I suspect, just lazy.
Rgds
Damon
The reductio ad absurdum is obvious.
Sad, and I suspect, just lazy.
Rgds
Damon
But you're not powerless to influence the subject of this debate, you're just throwing in the towel for no good reason it seems to me, and are therefore actively avoiding getting the best outcome, which is negligent.
Do you bother to vote?
Rgds
Damon
It must be lovely to be so cool and detached about such things. Do wars and pandemics and poverty also induce belly laughs in you?
Rgds
Damon
Hi
It is a silly demand because the scarcity is artificial and unless you are a fisherman (and possibly not even then) it is by no means an essential.
We can all just make up demands for things like 10t of precious metal each that might also be highly desirable because of how we happen to price them, but artificial scarcities are not meaning for a discussion.
Rgds
Damon
And I'd like two entire universes please.
Just because you can make a silly demand, doesn't make it anything other than that.
Rgds
Damon
Well, your sig "I am a crackpot" leads me to hope that you don't actually believe the mental contortions in that item!
Rgds
Damon
Confirmation bias is strong even when people try to avoid it, but I have once or twice even here on
It can happen, just not often, and changing an opinion is often a slow and gradual (and sometimes embarrassing) process, unlikely to be visible in the course of a single response.
Rgds
Damon
One of the reasons that I have not run my own forums, even as one of the first people with Internet connectivity in the UK for example, is the horror of dealing with that effect. I sincerely believe most people around me to be decent human beings, with some rougher edges exposed when not talking face to face.
But what is it that happens with discussion threads?
Rgds
Damon
Possibly I *could*, but as it's running on our custom hardware writing the emulation would be
But being able to bootload over serial with all the compilation (etc) happening on the laptop is still a huge boon. I still have burnt in my memory the sound of the grind grind of the floppies compiling and assembling on CPM, and with my one contact with Bill Gates (by telex) because of a boneheaded misfeature in the Microsoft tools... %-P
Rgds
Damon
The key virtue, such as it is, of the do {
With goto there is no such safety net.
But I think we're agreeing furiously.
Rgds
Damon
Bingo: you win tonight's Internets...
Rgds
Damon
PS. Like all that Y2K work I wasn't doing in a bank that wasn't necessary except that it was...
Lots of 'Internet of Things' code will be written in C (with some ASM and C++) as the 'things' tend to be resource constrained. That's a big market coming up.
I'm enjoying using C again on devices with similar performance to those I was using 30 years ago (now: ATMega328P running with 1MHz CPU, ie 1 MIPS; then Z80A with 4MHz clock making for ~1MIPS) but with lots better development tools this time, and several GHz of laptop to run them on.
https://sourceforge.net/p/open...
When not writing C (and developing hardware) I knock out (parts of) huge mission-critical Java systems for banks.
Each is good: each for its niche.
Rgds
Damon
Some sort of nested do {
Rgds
Damon
OK, good, I already understand that linking Apache and GPL code is a bad idea (though Apache and LGPL much less bad to completely OK depending on the details).
I thought that you were suggesting some problem between Eclipse and Apache that had completely passed me by.
(FWIW, I try to license code Apache 2 as far as possible to maximise the number of places that that code can be used.)
Rgds
Damon
Would you please expand on "The same applies to anything Apache licensed." for me?
Rgds
Damon
Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"