Comment: Dumbest Idea Ever (Score 1) 535
Comment: XXVI (Score 1) 341
Comment: Re:Bring back Neutron Jack (Score 1) 301
Comment: Re:Bring back Neutron Jack (Score 1) 301
Comment: Original Article (Score 1) 325
Comment: Re:Suicide? (Score 4, Interesting) 1343
Comment: Re:False analogy. (Score 1) 664
One exception: Gabe Parmer, GWU's new Operating Systems professor, can make confusing things like concurrency (spinlocks, semaphores, etc.) and page caches easy. After spending only one day on concurrency in his class, I got it. I overheard one student tell him that in a computer architecture class they'd spent 2 weeks on page caches without it making sense, but he'd just taught it in one day, and it made perfect sense. Such teachers are rare.
Comment: Re:How did a 3-year old pull the trigger? (Score 1) 1343
Did you check for discontinued models too?
Comment: Re:Gates never was the world's richest man (Score 1) 413
Comment: Re:How did a 3-year old pull the trigger? (Score 1) 1343
There's no way a toddler has the hand strength to chamber a round and cock the hammer. Furthermore, no toddler would ever mistake the weight difference between a real pistol and a fake plastic one. In fact, I'd be surprised if a three year old could lift one without dropping it. Perhaps the parents aren't being entirely candid.
Comment: Re:RMS (Score 1) 737
Yes, he may seem like a bit of a crack pot at times, but a lot of you owe him quite a bit. The man is not perfect, but he did a LOT for the computing world. I did my senior paper on Open Source and you know what? His name was all over it. He was quite a driving force behind the movement.
Accidental Wii Suicide 1343
from the guns-don't-kill-toddlers-do dept.
Comment: Re:respect or admire? (Score 1) 737
Possibly. Someone who is "too honest for their own good" would not be wanted in the modern intelligence community, of course. It was one thing when he was helping to win the war, but as intelligence became more a political than self-defence thing, the days of people like him were numbered.