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I was hardly well versed; more like a member of the coding user community and a rather junior one at that!
the code I worked with starting in the early 80s was adapting VICAR IBM batch code to work with an IIS image processing display system. That system was controlled by a PDP-11/34 with all of 256K of memory and three 5mb removable drives! the IIS machine could store in memory 8 512/512/8bit images on 9 printed circuit cards for each image (8k chips). It had hardware lookup tables as well as a pipeline processor for image to image math operations. by the 90s that was an updated IIS machine (64k chips, one board per image, 32 image channels) driven by a VAX.
I left that business in '96 and about 10 years later gave my personal archive tape to my former boss who tried to have the contents read by a contractor; the attempt failed. The code was still on an old MicroVAX, but it went to the landfill around the same time.
working with code written by the early heavy lifters had a huge impact on my coding career. The IBM version of VICAR was a "language" where a series of commands resulted in a string of image processing operations to be executed. The JCL controlled the files, the language processor was in assembler, and the individual modules controlled by the executive were all in FORTRAN. As a young upstart I once made the comment that wouldn't interactive be better, then you could see what you were producing much faster? The answer I got was "If you know what you are doing and what you are doing is worthwhile, then it is worth waiting for it."
Maybe VICAR was "An elegant weapon, for a more civilized age"
for a text from the early days, see Ken Castleman's Digital Image Processing (http://www.amazon.com/Digital-Image-Processing-Kenneth-Castleman/dp/0132114674[^]) - it was pretty cool to be able to take a class from him.
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As someone whose hobby is astrophotography (and, to toot my own horn a bit, has 4 APODs to his credit), I thought I'd chime in here.
For a bit of background, like the folks at NASA and other professional observatories, I use a monochrome astronomical CCD camera with color filters to take my images. I use a few different software packages for image processing, including Photoshop and others that are specifically designed for astronomical images.
The objects we shoot are extraordinarily faint. Even after hours and hours of exposure time, if you opened a typical image in Photoshop it would appear essentially black. It takes a lot of stretching and massaging to just make the objects visible. As one of my friends put it, we're trying to take a scene shot at night and make it look like it was taken in daylight. All that said, I think it's very safe to say that our goals as astrophotograpers are, at least for RGB/true color shots, to make the images look as real as we can while also displaying as much of the data as possible. This by nature requires a bunch of "selective adjustments" to keep from blowing out highlights when trying to bring out extremely faint stuff -- the dynamic range is huge. We also go through all sorts of steps to balance the color so that it's as accurate as possible. Sure there's artistic license taken -- this is about as much of a blur between art and science as you can get -- but it's definitely not "fake" or a "lie".
Just my 2 cents...
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Coffee?
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What else could it be?
The symbols mean: Heaven = fire + water + earth (or take coffee (earth coloured) and water and heat
And you're up tomorrow!
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Awesome. I thought they almost looked like a syringe: the most effective way of injecting coffee into your day
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Good to know. I think I'm going to treat him for a little ride next weekend.
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a f***ing golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?"
"You mean like from space?"
"No, from Canada."
If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.
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No that's not Bob!
Bob is an abstract entity
With friendly greetings,
Eric Goedhart
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Just got an e-mail from my Son's Cubs Leader. She has informed me that tomorrow they will be doing their Science Badge and "if we have anything Science at home, please bring it in".
The thing is I'm struggling to think of anything in my house that isn't "Science" in one way or another. I might need to phone Pickfords and get them to send a truck over so I can take everything in my House along, including myself.
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That stuff is all applied science. Do you have any pure science to share?
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They want
anything Science,
but you are
Computer Science,
so, you need to exclude yourself.
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Take in a knife and then look at the science behind that. If she complains, cut 'er!
veni bibi saltavi
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PompeyThree wrote: so I can take everything in my House along, including myself.
I'd heard a number of theories about you, but I didn't know any of them were proven...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Build and take in a portable meth lab, then point her to this.[^]
=========================================================
I'm an optoholic - my glass is always half full of vodka.
=========================================================
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Change your name to "Occam" and give him your razor to take in.
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Take a home made digital clock to school, it is very popular these days.
I'd rather be phishing!
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Considering they are a religious organization the complete lack of understanding of science is not surprising.
If you want to take an experiment and make them clean it up, Google for "Elephant Toothpaste". It's easy and you already have everything you need.
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Considering they are a religious organization the complete lack of understanding of science
I was thinking the same thing.
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I think you should perhaps be directing your ire at the individual leader here. The 'organization' produces a detailed list of suggested experiments, projects and resources for leaders supervising the badge and it looks more than sufficiently 'sciency' to me.
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My son is in Scouts. Sadly, it's not just one leader, though you are correct, I should have directed it just at that one person. In my experience with the leaders I've interacted with, the misunderstanding of the concepts of science goes much further than a few of them.
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: Considering they are a religious organization
Not so much in England. This was one of the main things that have noticeably changed since I was a kid there is a lot less emphasis on God. Partly due to other religions and cultures and partly to do with
Northern Europeans shunning religion. At least we still lead the world in one thing
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PompeyThree wrote: At least we still lead the world in one thing
Warm beer consumption?
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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