Comment Question is way too premature. (Score 1) 437
We're a long long long ways away from a totally autonomous car. The first self driving cars will definitely require a driver.
We're a long long long ways away from a totally autonomous car. The first self driving cars will definitely require a driver.
We're not in a situation of light regulation though. Who can lay down lines is heavily regulated at the local level.
So simply telling the FCC "hands off" is foolish. That just hands the problem to city politicians that can't possibly oppose the huge cable companies.
Half the posters don't even read their own reply.
The entire trick to religion has always been peace of mind. You don't have to think about the hard stuff. Of course the flip side of that is being a bad person.
I'd rather have morals with depression personally.
The best way to understand is to turn the question around. Look at the methods people use to visualize code. There's no one method that's really good. You have to use several different ones.
We might see some new tricks with VR though. Stuff like call graphs would work far better in full 3d.
Libertarians only care about freedom on public property. Once you're on their land it's their way or the highway.
Any language can do that. You're just impressed that javascript has come so far.
The only reason to "get used to it" is that web browsers still aren't supporting other languages.
Open and mature client technologies have always been a threat to MS's core business.
That's only true for the miniscule amounts they'd actually consider. Companies exist to pay employees less than they're actually worth.
Corruption at the top has made meaningful salaries impossible. So yes most people would rather enjoy their job. Start talking real extra money and they'll quickly change their tune.
Baboom users can install a little plugin that replaces the ads you'd normally see on the internet with ones that we control through our ad network. Just as advertisers go to AdWords to buy ads from Google for certain search terms, they'll be able to come to us and buy these ads at half the price and still have ads shown against the same keywords.
When the corporate masters hear about this it's going to get dicey.
If you read the article they're not really examining best sellers at all. A site like Gutenberg has no correlation with modern best sellers.
Film, TV and Internet have all had drastic effects on the market as well. Thus old books aren't really representative.
The GPL doesn't have anything to do with it. RMS won't even allow simple command line features that could be "used" by a proprietary IDE for instance.
It's an understandable stance but the result is inferior software.
It's only ambiguous to a scientist "twice as cold" is "double the negative distance from 72".
The magic bullet for eye tracking is using it for adaptive HDR. Monitors for good reason can't show bright lights. This makes it difficult to fit all the luminance information on the screen at once.
By tracking the eye we can adjust luminance information locally. This can have a huge impact on image quality.
The commission recommended that the phone companies or a third party take over responsibility for storing the data.
They're just trying to shuffle things. In the process it will most likely become worse.
IF I HAD A MINE SHAFT, I don't think I would just abandon it. There's got to be a better way. -- Jack Handley, The New Mexican, 1988.