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All the best people were born on 4th October ...
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No, no .. All the best people were born on October.
So, are you also born on October 4?
Don't mind those people who say you're not HOT. At least you know you're COOL.
I'm not afraid of falling, I'm afraid of the sudden stop at the end of the fall! - Richard Andrew x64
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: Really? I have T Shirts older than you.
ROFL... one of my favourite sayings... I use it a lot!!
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Got that habbit from school tests on religion,ancient greek and other useless stuff where I had nothing to write...got a 18/20 once for giving some good locations for vacation
I know it's childish but I wont stop it even if they put me in a mental clinic for it ! Oh wait
...
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I hav n IQ on 65. Or mebbe 165? I dunno? It don't mean much as I is purdy smart anyways.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair.
Those who seek perfection will only find imperfection
nils illegitimus carborundum
me, me, me
me, in pictures
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mark merrens wrote: I is purdy smart anyways.
All a matter of perspective...
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It's all about focus and motivation. If you can focus 100% on what you do and feel strongly motivated to do it, you can do anything.
Whatever you can do, or believe you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
— Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
"Whether you think you can or think you can't, you are right."
- Henry Ford
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EbolaHost wrote: Is that good enough for what I want?
You know how, when you lose your virginity, somebody just has to ask "was it good for you?" ? Well, that's what your question is like. If you have to ask, then you know it's not. Ah. I guess I just answered my question.
Marc
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Emotional Quotient is a lot more important than Intelligence Quotient.
Just remember that when in a few years you ask:
"If I'm so smart, why am I not rich?"
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You may remember I posted recently asking about some networking and cctv equipment (this post[^])
Anyway, I purchased the gear, installed it, and wrote about it here; I've Got My Eye On You.........A Journey Into Home CCTV and a Wireless Bridge[^]
Must say, I do like the Ubiquiti gear. Considering one of their EdgeRouters next as an option.
Also, been flicking through the captured video, and we have a regular visitor to the garden, a hedgehog, usually appears around midnight and spends a couple of hours wandering around!
It was an interesting project!
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DaveAuld wrote: Also, been flicking through the captured video, and we have a regular visitor to the garden
Perhaps this would be a cool thing to use some image processing with, to count how many times it's in your garden and then it can render a fancy bar chart of visitation times
.-.
|o,o|
,| _\=/_ .-""-.
||/_/_\_\ /[] _ _\
|_/|(_)|\\ _|_o_LII|_
\._. |\_/|"` |_| ==== |_|
|_|_| ||" || ||
|-|-| ||LI o ||
|_|_| ||'----'||
/_/ \_\ /__| |__\
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DaveAuld wrote: we have a regular visitor to the garden, a hedgehog
Interesting(?) thing that reminded me of.
My father was experimenting with signal degradation, back in the day. In order to degrade a signal over time, he had two disk recorders (we're talking pre tape recorders here, not CDs, these recorded sound direct to magnetic disk pre the disk drive!)
Anyhow. So, he recorded himself saying something like "Hello There!", and set the machines to record A->B then record that from B->A. The idea was to measure the degradation over time, see how much degradation would still be understandable etc.
You can imagine that, after a few iterations, there was pretty much a garbled "Mwaaa MWaaa" sound.
He set it to play in a loop, to record many copies to the other machine, and left it going.
When he remembered it, evening had come, he went and switched it off, but the noise didn't stop.
When he went to shut the curtains, outside the window, pressed up quite closely, were many (I don't recall how many, but like more than half a dozen) hedgehogs, all making a similar noise!
He repeated the experiment at different times, and found that it always attracted hedgehogs.
As kids we loved it, as he would play the sound for an hour or two before our bedtimes, and we could go out and put saucers of milk for them.
Happy Days!
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_Maxxx_ wrote: go out and put saucers of milk for them
Apparently they shouldn't drink milk, it gives them the sh!ts. Also fish based cat food isn't too good for them either. Just saying!
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yeah - well, surely they eat milk - they're mammals after all. And those spines are great for catching small fish - they just jump in a stream and come up with lunch!
... or have I been listening to 'would I lie to you?'?
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Wow. I certainly have a different sense of humor than you do.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I hope we are different in a lot more than that
It's an OO world.
public class SanderRossel : Lazy<Person>
{
public void DoWork()
{
throw new NotSupportedException();
}
}
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For example, taking a stab here, if I work in Ruby on Rails, everyone uses GitHub, TTD, Agile to the extreme (ie, short stories, sprints, etc.), lots of refactoring, little overall thought to architecture and maintainability, minimal or no code documentation, and so forth.
If I work in C#, probably TFS, probably less emphasis on TDD, possibly more up-front design, less Agile principles, possibly more "milestone" oriented, code reviews rather than peer programming, etc.
What's your experience, especially if you're working just in Javascript (for example, node.js), or other languages (Python, VB, C++, and so forth.)
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: How does the programming language effect the development "ethos"?
Only if you let it. I have been on an agile project where we used mostly Javascript. Go figure.
I think it all depends on the development team.
Sure some people get caught up in a development ethos, but that does not have to follow from the use of a language.
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
I'm on-line therefore I am.
JimmyRopes
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In my experience it has nothing to do with language or environment, but it's a more personal issue. The manager is the soloist and he try to collect programmers who make no dissonant melodies. For instance I worked with the same manager over time in COBOL, C++, VB and C# and it changed nothing...
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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Well, me the Lua developer is a bit different from me, the C one. Luckily the two universes interact.
Veni, vidi, vici.
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I find this to be the case as well. It's just some things go hand-in-hand.
One thing I'd add to the pot is some hard core C hacker types that swear OOP is overrated and most of it can be achieved in C... blah blah blah. Don't get me wrong, C is still my favorite language, but... blah blah blah ya know.
The classic VB crowd (still freaking exists!!!) pretty much goes like "we don't like studying but want to pretend we're developers" or "our clients want us to use it" or "we got more important things to do than learn how to do our job"... blah blah blah. These guys also wouldn't know what a unit test is or a design pattern or a decent UI. But they say they do!
Just like how typically most PHP developers tend to use MySQL over SQL Server.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: One thing I'd add to the pot is some hard core C hacker types that swear OOP is overrated and most all of it can be achieved in C
FFY
Veni, vidi, vici.
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Believe it or not, the thing I miss the most when in C isn't classes, it's namespaces.
Jeremy Falcon
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