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Just don't go overboard and take it to a gunfight.
Sent from my BatComputer via HAL 9000 and M5
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Bone the chicken save the fingers, repeat after me...
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(Unco) developers should not be allowed near sharp objects... Myself included!!
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I always near sharp objects - my fellow developers
I'm not questioning your powers of observation; I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is (V).
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Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter wrote: I always near sharp objects The sharpest thing I use is c# and believe me, there are days when it's as blunt as a seed drill.
If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.
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Back in the day when I was a Boy Scout, we were required to prove that we could handle an edged weapon before we were allowed to carry one. Earning the Tote 'N Chip card was an honor that few held; I had one before I had my First Class Scout badge. Maybe it's time we instituted a similar training and certification program for casual cooks and apartment renters...
Will Rogers never met me.
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Linky[^]
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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Did you at least manage to remove your finger bones? All that suffering's for nothing if you didn't.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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So everybody else is taking the high road, regarding this gentleman's new boning knife?
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Please, don't put such things into the news when I'm drinking a beer. Here wasting good beer is a capital crime and I may also need a new monitor.
We are talking about the same electronics junk that they have been predicting to gain intelligence by an act of god any minute for at least the last 100 years? Someone has been drinking too much Cool-Aid.
It's really insulting to claim that one of the good old 'plant in a pot' algorithmic morons could be more intelligent than any of us in a few years. And then this:
Your smartphone will be able to predict your next move or your next purchase based on what it knows about you. This will be made possible by gathering data using a technique called "cognizant computing".
Good luck. Have I already told you where to put your spyware, your spam and your databases?
Edit: And now I also find this one: What makes Java developers more productive? That's easy to answer: Learning to program and changing to C++
Sent from my BatComputer via HAL 9000 and M5
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This is obviously wrong. I don't own a smartphone, nor will I own one in 2017!
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Same here. Could it be that we are smarter than a future Smartphone?
Sent from my BatComputer via HAL 9000 and M5
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CDP1802 wrote: This will be made possible by gathering data using a technique called "cognizant computing".
Invasion of privacy would be more like it.
When I go to the mall I get those people at the kiosk that are real aggressive and when you go by they're all over you. If I want your freakin product I'll stop at your kiosk and look at the junk you've got otherwise leave me alone.
Now consider that your cell phone is linked into the matrix and every store you pass or go into you get a "Hey we got this POS on sale and it's just what you need and/or want so come on in".
I'd give them a piece of my mind but I';m afraid it's the last piece?
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Mike Hankey wrote: Hey we got this POS on sale
Isn't Point Of Sale redundant in that... oh right
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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A number of years ago I developed a technique that has proved exceedingly effective for dealing with aggressive telephone/mall marketers.
I simply and calmly ask them "Do you advertise?" The response is a unanimous "yes!" I then ask "Do you have phones at your business?" Invariably, after rolling their eyes at me, they again respond yes.
Then I ask, "What on earth makes you think I wouldn't contact your company if I had any interest whatsoever in the products/services you have?" I don't remember ever receiving an answer to that question.
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I'll have to remember that one!
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I recently posted a Quick Question, which I thought was plainly understandable. I received some comments to which I was tempted to write a somewhat biting reply, but then I thought I'd better hold my tongue and check...
Is there something about my question (see below) that doesn't make sense? Can you take it in some different context I'm not seeing? Are my comments on the comments reasonable?
VS2010 Resource Editor Tab Names[^]
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Yeah, he seems to spend a lot of time telling people he didn't understand their question...
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I'm still struggling to understand half his answers
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He is the guy who told the most people that he didn't understood their question
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There is someone - no names - who accuses people of "cheating" in QA - not sure what that means, hadn't realised it was a competition. However, have spotted tonight that several of their solutions have been edited a couple of times ... add a letter here, remove some bold there and such ... guess that's a good way to up your points in the game ... if it was a game. Which it is not. etc etc
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Seemed understandable to me - don't know the answer, but the question makes sense - so I countered the down vote.
The only instant messaging I do involves my middle finger.
English doesn't borrow from other languages.
English follows other languages down dark alleys, knocks them over and goes through their pockets for loose grammar.
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Thank you. I'm at a bit of a loss as to what he thinks I'm asking about...seems he thinks I want to display the resource IDs in my app in some way. I think.
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