Dance dance.. IMMOLATION - 2:09 AM
http://www.interpretivearson.com/ddi/
KEKEKEKE
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/hardware/soa/Qantas_flights_checked_for_Dell_batteries/0,2000061702,39267506,00.htm
I've found a rather important thing while I'm coding. 90% of the time, if I put down a TODO in a comment, I first of all never get around to doing it, and second of all, should have done it instead of writing the comment. Most of the time it actually doesn't take very much time to do, it is merely uninteresting to write, and sometimes just bothersome as it is knee deep in other code. What I find is that if I try hard NOT to write any TODOs, I end up with substancially superior code.
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Mr. T prefers a double-shot of espresso with two graham crackers, go figure: "Back in November, Paul Davidson popped into his local Starbucks coffee shop and ended up in line right behind Mr. T. Unlike me, Mr. Davidson actually knew ahead of time what he was going to ask the former A-Team heavy. And the answer was worth waiting for.
Every discipline has its crackpots: Stories of mathematics: " I'm sure every discipline has its share of crackpots. I suspect the physicists get it the worst, starting with the old standbys of perpetual motion machines and faster-than-light travel, then tossing in quantum mechanics and nuclear physics, and stirring with large quantities of long rambling text that makes no sense. But my experience is with mathematics. When I was in college, the mathematics department would post 'interesting letters' onto the bulletin board. The ones I remember: A claimed proof of Fermat's Last Theorem by means of music theory. It started with 3² + 4² = 5², then somehow converted this into musical notation, transposed it into another key, and then concluded that the proof was complete. There were many 'proofs' of Fermat's Last Theorem on the bulletin board. A letter from an inmate at a correctional facility who had developed a system for winning the lottery and merely needed a printout of all possible ways of choosing 6 numbers from a pool of 46. A number theorist working "