Comment Re:Yep, that's Singapore (Score 1) 57
The same thing the USA has been doing for a few years, you mean? When I was a resident alien with a "green card" I was required to undergo an iris scan.
The same thing the USA has been doing for a few years, you mean? When I was a resident alien with a "green card" I was required to undergo an iris scan.
No, but he might start an SS in the United States.
Fitbit devices don't use electrical signals to measure your heartbeat. They work optically by sensing blood flow under the skin.
Yeah, my first thought on reading the summary was "Dude, just walk away from Wikipedia like the rest of us have".
I used to find iTunes OK, back when DAAP worked and I could just access music from my music server. Then Apple broke that, redesigned the interface several times, and crammed in yet more junk I'll never use like iPhone app management.
I got so sick of iTunes and of having three different mutually incompatible proprietary cables for our iPods that I got rid of all the iPods and replaced them with MP3 players that just mount as regular disk drives.
Now I use Vox for music playback on the Mac. Bonus: It handles FLAC, unlike sucky iTunes.
And they're still doing the bulk phone surveillance, by exchanging data with GCHQ and the other members of the UKUSA pact. They just aren't doing surveillance of Americans directly themselves any more.
The two major Pascal implementations (Free Pascal and Delphi) are fairly compatible with each other so it's not as fragmented as you think.
It's isn't fragmented now, because it's dead other than those two non-standard compilers, all the other implementations having vanished along with their communities...
As I said, fragmentation is what killed the Pascal community. Or at least, that was my view as a participant. The fact that we still don't have a common Pascal standard today means it's not going to come back from the dead.
The Pascal community fragmented. The 8-bit systems carried on using ISO Pascal or UCSD Pascal, but Wirth and other key Pascal experts went off and created Modula-2, which was much more practical for real world programming. (I used Modula-2 on the Atari ST, it was a much nicer experience than trying to program GEM in C.)
But instead of Pascal or Modula-2, Borland went off and did their own thing, producing a proprietary "Pascal" that wasn't compatible with anyone else.
Then the Modula-2 community split into the Oberon (Wirth) and Modula-3 (everyone else) communities to add OO, and Borland again did their own thing and ignored everyone else.
Now we have Go, which takes C and adds in ideas from Modula and Oberon. And Free Pascal still isn't even compatible with 1982's standard ISO Pascal.
I've always wondered why those "flailing dead body" bugs are so hard for Bethesda to fix. Given that the game engine knows the body is dead, you'd think they could at least apply some heavy motion damping.
I have a Nexus 5X and some Monoprice A-to-C cables. The 5X correctly detects that it's connected to a legacy USB 2 connection via a type A connector, and tells me it's charging slowly.
they ASSSUMED that I wanted to continue doing help desk
Wow, shows how much they know about working help desk...
Let me know when I can actually download and build a Swift compiler on something other than OS X, and I'll take a look at the language. Until then I'm not interested. And I'm a Mac user.
(On an unrelated note, who the fuck thought it was a good idea to use the Exit icon to indicate logging in to Slashdot?)
IBM's using all those IP addresses, though. In fact, within the company IP addresses are in short supply.
Actually unnecessary medical procedures are a serious problem that results in people dying.
Force needed to accelerate 2.2lbs of cookies = 1 Fig-newton to 1 meter per second