tl;dr He eats mostly raw fruits and veggies and gets his liquids from those. He had an "Addiction" to processed foods. Clearly he has issues with food and is compelled to share it with the world. It's about as obnoxious as you can imagine.
It's accurate. This book is being ripped apart by scholars across many different disciplines. It's a lovely piece of trash that makes Wolfe look as bad as this article suggests.
In the same paragraph where "Higher Dimensional Black Holes" is mentioned, the journalist hedges the outlandish suggestion with "But no theory yet captures the whole story. “I do not think that there is any remotely credible hypothesis proposed at this moment in time,” Zaanen said."
So... "Yea.. uh huh... interesting concept, not a chance" to paraphrase.
What is it with folks that fail to appreciate the power imbalance in society and how that makes it impossible to flip the genders in a situation to prove sexism doesn't exist. It's nuts.
Hi is words were deeply offensive even with the most charitable perspective... That it was just a joke. The not-pology was icing on the crappy cake, "I'm sorry that you were wrong in your interpretation of my words".
I'm more interested in finding a solution to the problem then I am about protecting my domain of knowledge, or insuring that my coworkers are aware that my domain is special and mine. I can't help but feel that this article comes from a perspective of competitiveness rather than problem solving. Perhaps the reason so many seem to agree with this (even tentatively) is the competitive culture in so much of IT (at least that I read about). I'm glad we don't have that where I work.
Has that never happened to you? You are stuck on a problem for what feels like forever. It's complex and difficult to keep completely in your mind at once. You've hit it from every facet that you can think off. Then you explain it to someone that knows very little of the problem and they throw out a little perspective, maybe preceded with a "Can you just..." and it may not be the solution, but your mind sort of jump starts down a different path than it had before.
I see this "Can you just..." business similar to the advice that you just stop working on the problem that you can't solve and think about something else for a while. Take a nap, go for a walk, have a drink. Wait until tomorrow. Often times the problem isn't that the problem is difficult to solve or that it's complex (it is), but rather that you are too mired in it to come up with the solution. "Can you just... " suggestions often pull me out of the trees so I can see the forest.
I agree completely. Going a step further, as OP has and shutting down potential helpful new perspectives and solutions by implementing a "jar" is reprehensible. When I've been mired in a complex problem for hours and I'm not any closer to a solution than when I started out, helpful "can you just" perspectives is often the key to unlocking a new line of thought that allows me to come up with the solution. Implementing a jar is like having someone pay you to ignore their often helpful perspectives. It's reprehensible.
I guess another way to put this is... I'm more interested in finding the solution than I am in making sure that everyone around me thinks that my domain is special and complex and that they don't share it with me.
Having dealt with both, I'm split. I think, in the end, I'd rather model the DDLs and have everything point to separate database on the same server or a new namespace in the existing database. You give enough rope for the customer to hang themselves, but sometimes their requirements are to build a gallows.
Speech can definitely be violence and suggesting otherwise trivializes emotional abuse and trauma faced by those that suffer from PTSD and other mental illnesses.
I don't think it needs to be Facebook to not be fucked, but I agree with OP that it could change it's user metrics to better affect behavior. Maybe similar to rep here on ycombinator.com where you get downvoted by the community if you are an ass or not adding productively to the conversation. Combining rep with privileges like stackoverflow.com where a user can't DM until they hit a certain rep, or can't cause a notification on other's devices when they tweet would curtail sock-puppeting and other trollish behavior that plagues Twitter.
As for up to date news, I follow Google's top 10 searches in Feedly (where I follow hundreds of sites) and it works as a pretty decent up-to-date top news trend that gets updated every hour or so. I can appreciate if every hour or so is too slow for some folks though. I'm not in media, and don't really care if Rihanna fell of the stage a few minutes ago during her concert, but I totally get it if others do.
Same here. I have an account, but I've never found any use for it. I've tried a few times, but it offers nothing that I want.
I tend to be more "Social" on sites that focus on a specific topic like StackOverflow, Blogs that I follow, Facebook for friends and family, so Twitter offers nothing there.
Others seem to use twitter as a new aggregator where stories they care about get bubbled up by their followers. I use feedly though to track the hundreds of sites I care about and I've gotten very adept at filtering through the content I don't care about using it.
When I have used twitter, I've found the amount of content overwhelming and I hate that I feel this need to "Catch up" since last time I looked at it. It's endless monotony.
If you are a developer worth your salt and not even registering on that scale, then I'm going to go with "Underpaid". Unless you live in like Bumstump, TX where you can buy a 4 bedroom 3 bath home on 2 acres of land for 60k.
A proposal, which was a PETITION, made by interns, that have absolutely no capital with which to bargain, let alone demand via petition, over the company's culture. It's insane.
There is a big difference between an open-door policy and allowing a group of interns, most of which are a net-negative for the company while they are interns, to petition the company's leadership to change their culture. The intern writing the letter even stated that they had already had a conversation with their manager about it. Sounded like that convo went pretty well. "We appreciate your view, but no, the dress code is not changing". That is a good open door sounding culture.
"Special Snowflake" is pretty fitting here. You want to band together with fellow interns to make changes at the company with which you are interning? Make that company some money. That's why they are in business. That's what they will listen to. You are a "Special Snowflake" if the dress code is the sword you are going to fall on. It's nuts and these kids need to grow up.
Banding together with other interns and petitioning the company to change their culture is crazy levels of naive. As an intern, you are most likely a net-negative. At best, consider yourself on a long term interview. It's not the time to ask that the company change its culture. If you happened to get picked up by the company and find yourself in a job, it's still not the time. It's not a democracy. The business was built to make money and it was determined long before you got there that the dress code would help them achieve that goal. Unless you can put some money where your dumb petition is, your best hope is some extreme eye rolling.
The world is full of simplified programming languages. The problem with newb adoption isn't just a function of ease-of-use, the simple programming language must also interact with a familiar UI. Why would I, as a newb, want to write in a simple programming language if it can't do something sufficiently complex, like create form UI, or change a web page, or interact with my OS to do something useful?
This is why VBA is so common. It's a simple scripting language that is exceedingly forgiving and interacts with a built in UI that most folks are already comfortable using. There is a "Macro Recorder" that writes the script for you if you wish. As you advance in your VBA skills you can interact with other VBA enabled applications on your machine and then graduate to shared libraries and com objects and interact with the OS. Furthemore, Microsoft Office applications come with a built in IDE (VBE), so you are ready to go, out of the box.
I don't know where I stand on this one. Museum Hack seems overly protective of their pretty generic name. T&L either employs a lazy designer or a vindictive writer. None of the offenses seem legal-worthy, so really it's just a morality thing. Right?
Final Verdict: Museum Hack by a hair! Since I'm nobody, you only get 5 points this round. I can't tell if ya'll are just going for publicity with this or you're just really attached to primary colors. Whatever though, it's business.
That website has gained R/W access to my brain. It uses pointers and had to be compiled with /unsafe. It compelled me to write this comment. I've lost control of both my pointer fingers, my left big toe, and my left eyelid. Why would God sign this s,ǝʇᴉsqǝʍ code when it uses bits of code from 100BC that were written before Jesus came and locked down sin. Probably code ƃuᴉuƃᴉs a̷̶̙̫̳͔͂͗̋̃u̜̍͒̔̅͛ͪ͘t̪̞̠̃̆ͯ͛̓̓ǒ͎̹̺͉̚̕͟͡m̺͔̞͉̦͓ͧͥͤ͛̅́͞a̛̫͉̹̒ͨ̏͜ẗ̵͎̖̻̺̤̱̰̹̯̕͡i͓̬̲̅ͮ͢͡ỏ̷̯͔ͪͯ̄ͅń̡̖̭͚̹͚̪̊̃͌́̚ ̟̳̤̩͉̭͓̀̓̈̍̔͝w̛̘̱͚̫̉ͬ͗ͯ̒̽͂ͭḩ̡͍̖̻͗̊͒̾̈́̐ͯi̠̼͒̇̄͛ͣ̀̀c̹̝̞̀̽ͤ̓̃̚h̘̪͙ͭ͛͆ͥ̓ ˙ƃuᴉɯɐǝɹɔs ǝɥ┴ ˙ƃuᴉɯɐǝɹɔs ǝɥʇ uᴉɐɹq sᴉɥʇ ɟo ʇno ʇuɐʍ I ƃ̮͚̳̮̻̗͝u̪̺͎̘͎͚ᴉ̫͇̫̮̲̗ɯ̴̤̥̠ɐ̪̠̻̳͔̭ǝ̬ɹ̲͚̗̣̟̳ɔ̛̺͔̯̖̯s̝̜̫͘ ̴͉̱͎̭̯͇ǝ̖̝͎͎͇̞̙͟ɥ҉┴͙̣̞̞̜͎͇͟ ̙͉̠͖̩̭ͅ