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Quote: While frustrating for those eagerly awaiting the update... All one of them (users, that is)
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Quote: Known variously as Windows 10 version 1803, Cumulative Update for Windows 10 Version Next, Redstone 4 and Windows 10 Spring Creators Update Version naming has gone insane.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Don't forget "The Next Elephanting Update"!
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That really bugs me 
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But how to measure that? Your team is waiting "He that dies pays all debts."
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What we're talking about here is technical debt. The decisions that developers make early on to get the code out the door can come back and bite them – or their successors – later.
Equally important are the decisions that the developers fail to realize that they should be making. This may be the best distinction between a senior developer vs. a junior developer -- the senior developer knows (or should know) quite a bit more about the decisions need that to be made.
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By now Facebook users seem to finally get that they may not get charged anything for using the social networking service but it sure isn't free, not after being subjected to ad after spookily tailored ad. Tree fiddy?
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I always said to my family: there is no privacy in Internet. Once the data "leaves" your device and go in a server, well... goodbye.
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Berkeley researchers have now made a major advance in realistic computer animation, using deep reinforcement learning to recreate natural motions, even for acrobatic feats like break dancing and martial arts. Realistic? Still looks like a balloon animal to me
modified 13-Apr-18 0:54am.
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Oh, bother. Thank you.
TTFN - Kent
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No matter what language or technology stack you use, if you can describe your code with these adjectives, good code should follow But of course, you already knew you were
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11 signs InfoWorld articles are pointless garbage.
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10 and 11 are missing because InfoWorld authors can't count that high.
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I found the missing signs and a few more beyond them.
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Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Bad news for "night owls": Those who tend to stay up late and sleep in well past sunrise are at increased risk of early death, a new study from the United Kingdom suggests. If my choices are getting up at 5am or dying sooner, I'm still hitting the snooze bar
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Oh marvelous!
I started the day hearing from some other bunch of boffins about how I'll die early because I drink more than a pint of beer a day (surely the only alternative to death by hydration).
And now this.
I was looking forward to the weekend but now I'm not convinced that I'll be around to see it.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Yes, but night owls have a hoot more fun, so it's worth a few minutes less of life.
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There was a previous study that found exactly the opposite.
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Of course there was - I'd be surprised if there weren't. And if there weren't a new one next week that contradicted this one, and another, and another...
TTFN - Kent
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ad infinitum...
I suspect one could find a study that confirms just about any hypothesis you might want to propose.
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Work on the AV1 (AOMedia Video 1) codec started in 2015, when Google, Cisco, and Mozilla+Xiph.org pooled together three codecs —VPX, Thor, and Daala— into a new project that aimed to create a royalty-free codec that they planned to make freely available to anyone on the video market. Just in time to kill the radio star
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A team of academics has successfully developed and tested malware that can exfiltrate data from air-gapped computers via power lines. The team —from the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel— named their data exfiltration technique PowerHammer. Beware of hackers with volt meters
Of course, the first step is, "install malware"
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This isn’t a job title you should accept, unless you have your back against the wall For discussion purposes
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Having worked my way up through working in a shop selling plastic gifts to working as a warehouse worker shifting lorry loads of heavy boxes I am still amazed at how some people think that their first or even second job should be well paid or even interesting.
Having a PhD in AI from Stanford does not mean that you are competent at working in a business with all that it involves - therefore your first job should be as a junior role as you still have a lot to learn in your first 10 years of employment.
Rant over... for the moment...
...well not quite over...
Learning can be summarised in four stages:
Unconscious incompetence
Conscious incompetence
Conscious competence
Unconscious competence
The chap who wrote the article seems to still be at the Unconscious incompetence stage
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
modified 12-Apr-18 8:24am.
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 I agree with what you wrote but it doesn't accurately reflect the opinion of the article at all. He isn't saying that you should only take high-paying or interesting work (though that's definitely a bonus). He's saying that titles can poison future opportunities so both companies and job-seekers should be mindful of that.
The owner of the company had an objection at the time that infuriated me. He worried that giving them good job titles would make it easier for them to work elsewhere and wondered if we shouldn’t sandbag them a little. Make them “coders” instead of “software engineers” or throw in a “junior” at the lowest level.
I subscribe to Richard Branson’s wisdom related to this matter (which I think post-dated the conversation anyway). “Train people well enough so they can leave, treat them well enough so they don’t want to.” You keep people by partnering with them and making them feel valued, not by sandbagging them.
[...] The job title, in spite of being a construct whose value I fundamentally question, is sociologically fascinating for an armchair dilettante like myself. Within a company, job titles mostly matter procedurally. [...] But then, when you go to interview somewhere else, they suddenly matter in a very economically tangible way. The loose title consensus across the broad spectrum of companies (and, quite often, the question “how much did you make at your last job”) is how your new company places you in its pecking order.
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