Comment Re:SO gt AI (Score 2) 51
meant the subject to be "SO > AI" ; ugh
meant the subject to be "SO > AI" ; ugh
I prefer StackOverflow answers over AI responses to questions, because they are peer-reviewed and occasionally corrected or adjusted to specific conditions, and I know that someone actually tried the solution(s) provided instead of it being some amalgamation of various possible solutions.
Easy to combine this 'feature' with the near-omnipresent surveillance state. No need to be asked to submit your face to unlock your phone: good chance they already have sufficient video to do it themselves.
I see this as very wise: only after accepting that there will be an end (to the company), can one make the intervening time more fulfilling (profitable).
My teammates and I found ourselves with what seemed like an easy task: automate the creation of Excel documents for enterprise-wide system resource utilization from our inventory database that would normally take a single person 2 months to do by hand...
18 months later, the code is still under active development, the results are heavily scrutinized (as they are now accurate enough to be used as planning tools for future expenditures), and at least 50% of our effort each sprint is spent improving the code or the underlying inventory data.
Me: 2004 Camry, 2008 Mac tower, iPhone 6s with a recently- (and freely-) replaced battery.
If something can perform its intended job, it does not need replacing.
it's in the trinity: close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and nuclear war.
Learned Perl over Columbus Day weekend in 1992 as an E-4 in the Air Force; still using it today, for contracted and open-source projects.
Specifically, it's the reaction the body has to the carbohydrates (sugar): spiking insulin levels, blocking the release of fat as a fuel source, and encouraging the body to store energy as fat.
+1
- Apr/1995 - Oct/1995: hired part-time by consulting company (during last 6 months
of active duty) on the strong recommendation of former USAF teammate.
- Oct/1995 - Jan/2010: hired full-time (1) by customer of aforementioned consulting company.
- Feb/2010 - Jun/2014: hired full-time (2) by former co-workers at FT Job 1.
- Jul/2014 - Feb/2015: hired after strong recommendation by former co-worker at FT Job 1.
- Feb/2015 - Present: hired by former co-worker at both FT Jobs 1 and 2.
It's all who knows what you are capable of. Skills only go away if not used, and the best way to keep
using them it to adapt them to modern problems (e.x.: from reading CSV files to reading XML/SOAP/REST output; from
writing CSV files to writing Excel documents including full charts).
BTW, still using the same language (Perl) to wrangle data into meaningful forms (to include a log monitoring program
written, then open-sourced, from FT Job 1 circa 1996). Language du jour can pass by HR/recruiters' desks all day, but
people who need things to Get Done know who can Get It Done, and are less caring about the how.
If they took the "Standard American Diet" and added fat, then yes, I can see that being a problem, but from the carbohydrates that are still there.
I didn't see any reference to how the tests were ran, so it is very challenging to properly understand how they reached their conclusions.
I have been running on a LCHF way of eating for nearly 2 years, with zero negative impacts.
We had one too.
Imagine playing a video game via a Bop-It(tm); that will give you the proper experience.
Thankfully the Atari 2600 and VIC-20 arrived soon thereafter #andtherestishistory
Perhaps a screening of the final episode of "M*A*S*H"?
Started a low-carb high-fat way of eating 13 months ago, with zero change in exercise; result: 50 pounds lost (20% of body weight).
My GP is not pleased with the slightly high total cholesterol numbers, but IMO she needs more education about what is really going on.
I would recommend watching "Fat Head" on the Intertubez to get a rather-comical explanation of how the body works at a chemical level,
and how to hack that working system to your advantage.
Started in USAF at age 20: spent 3 years QA'ing contractors' code, found Unix (ATT SysV), spent 2 more writing glue programs (BASIC/Pascal/Shell) for management and re-writing contractor's Ada; jumped to sysadmin position, found Perl, found CGI, spent 3 years writing more management glue; left a stripe on the table for private sector, spent 14 years leapfrogging between customer-facing and infrastructure teams, running 10*[1..3] systems and writing Perl/PHP glue; laid off, then picked up by different company, spent 4 years there defending the Internet from DDoS while writing more glue; cut loose, then picked up by govt contractor, who needs more glue.
The key to my longevity is keeping in contact with co-workers who know what you can do, regardless of the specific environment, and learning Perl in 1992 (thx merlyn).
"Little else matters than to write good code." -- Karl Lehenbauer