their billions of profit.
Kodak??
Yeah, the charging situation is interesting.
If you charge at home, so much cheaper than gas.
If you can't charge at home, so much more expensive than gas.
Well, sure, but you can say the same thing of so much in automotive tech...
When all those gaskets need to be replaced, when the transmission grinds itself, when the coolant system leaks, when the turbo goes, if the timing belt goes, every few months when you change the oil, etc etc.
Sure, it's a item worthy of being wary of and a good opportunity to improve, but it's not like ICE engines are nice and immune from expensive costs down the line.
Rust's new status in Linux hints at a career path that blends deep understanding of C with fluency in Rust's safety guarantees.
It would seem that adopting Rust, which is supposed to be safe by design, would relieve developers of the duty to write safe code. After all, its Rust. None of these nasty null pointers and buffer oveflows are possible. Just like Python relieves developers from the duty of formatting readable code.
Developers should now be freed to make higher level, more difficult to find logic erors.
We know enough about physics to say there isn't going to be anything as impact as entering the age of stream, or the atomic age again.
Thank goodness we made those leaps in microprocessor design and software back in the 1980s. So there's no need for further incremental improvements.
Typed on my $2500 IBM PC, with 640K of memory. Using MSDOS.
PBS is primarily (85%) privately funded. It will continue to produce shows like Masterpiece, Nova, Frontline, and Sesame Street and people in places like Boston or Philadelphia will continue to benefit from them.
What public funding does is give viewers in poorer, more rural areas access to the same information that wealthy cities enjoy. It pays for access for people who don't have it.
By opting out, Arkansas public broadcasting saves 2.5 million dollars in dues, sure. But it loses access to about $300 million dollars in privately funded programming annually.
I wish I could say I'm surprised.
However, this has been a consistent pattern that goes back to the 1930s and I wouldn't raise an eyebrow if you corected that to the 1830s. Companies know that you make the most money by selling to both sides.
Seriously, the idea that we know all the practically important physics there is is the kind of thing only somebody who's never done science or engineering would believe.
Looks at the hundreds of billions being funneled into AI research with no profit in sight
My guess: It's a scam, built on pre-existing 'bot technology.
When it's all done with, the "investors" will have a huge tax write off for their losses plus some neat new data centers, high end servers and utility resources to go into Bitcoin mining big time.
In related news, Netflix turns a failed $11 million investment into a $55 million tax loss.
Bialystock and Bloom have nothing on Netflix.
no Author and no Publisher. There is no copyright, no index, no Table of Contents, no page numbers, no dedication and no identification of any kind
There is no logic, no story, no points being made nor arranged in any sensible order.
You bought The Bible?
don't exploit people's mental vulnerability
Then who remains to buy iCrap?
Yes. And no.
Free apps will continue. As long as they are actually free. Anything that owes (owed?) Apple that 27% of in-app sales or other revenue sources is either not free. Or written by a very generous developer. Apple gots ta' get paid.
I would expect "developers fees" to be considered at some stage
What do you think the current 27% fee is? Maybe replaced with a fee for Apple Store server space and installation bandwidth. That's what the now defunct Apple Tax supposedly covered. But the in-app sales revenue stream doesn't necessarily run through Apple systems. And presents no cost to them.
egrep -n '^[a-z].*\(' $ | sort -t':' +2.0