Comment Re:Strange that the company should comp for educat (Score 1) 433
Maybe you're just a shitty employee then. Where I work that's not true.
Maybe you're just a shitty employee then. Where I work that's not true.
Many of mitsubishi's TVs had horrible electronics. I knew about a year after I bought my modle 52525 that it wasn't going to last more than about 3. Sure enough, within 3 years it was broken and mitsubishi wasn't being proactive about fixing the bad control boards.
Why companies need to save a few bucks on capacitors on a $2000 television will never make sense to me.
Too bad you can't file abn anti-SLAPP lawsuit against the FBI. That seems to be what they're doing. The resources of the US against some dude in NZ.
And you may well be arrested for it.
likely he''ll do it from NZ.. chances are probably a little better there?
Huh? Not sure what you're talking about.
Let's get to the point where no one can make a phone anymore. That seems to be the only way we'll see the patent system get reformed.
There aren't any officially sanctioned original DVDs. The best you can get are the laserdiscs or LD rips of the standard definition version.
as well as combustion engine weight
let the employees take home a few if they have a use for them. Make people happy and it won't cost anything or at least not much depending on what you would otherwise do with them.
The killer feature for me, though.. is talk and data simultaneous on an iphone.. only at&t can do that so far.
Not sure about tmobile, but no lte makes that kinda stinky.
I don't understand how the crappy pc manufacturers still haven't learned that just because Apple can do it doesn't mean they can try and make a shitty copy and actually sell it.
They've keep trying.. tablets that flop, ultrabooks that flop, all-in-ones that flop..
Over and over they make shitty copies of apple products, price them the same, and then are bewildered when they don't sell.
Go to school, keep tinkering, and get internships.
That is how to set yourself up to be successful as a professional programmer.
Also, a good internship pays very well, gets you a good sense how to do things right, and can land you with a job offer (or two) before you graduate.
Self taught programmers are often extremely weak in the area of algorithms and data structures. They solve problems with the tools they have, but they never had anyone to show them a whole additional set of tools to wrap their minds around. i.e. they don't know what they don't know.
It's extremely rare that I interview someone purely self taught who can pass my interview and get a job offer. Their solutions are usually incredibly simplistic and naive.
They dont need to be fire resistant when they're in a different building. It's great and all, but if your house and your bank have a fire at the same time, you probably have bigger problems..
The rule on staying alive as a program manager is to give 'em a number or give 'em a date, but never give 'em both at once.