On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, Petro wrote:
> On Saturday, November 17, 2001, at 07:36 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > (in my perfectly humble hate-group inspired opinion :-). It's also
> > great
> > fun watching Jeff and company pretend to be even dumber than your
> > average
> > @home luser.
>
>
On Saturday, November 17, 2001, at 07:36 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> (in my perfectly humble hate-group inspired opinion :-). It's also
> great
> fun watching Jeff and company pretend to be even dumber than your
> average
> @home luser.
What makes you think they're pretending?
--
At 10:51 AM 11/17/01 -0800, Tim May wrote:
>
>One of my long-term programming heroes is Dan Ingalls, the guy who
>invented BitBlt (for windowing systems) and did most of the actual
>development of Smalltalk. He's still in the thick of things and is
>contributing mightily.
Walker of Autodesk/
On Saturday, November 17, 2001, at 12:48 PM, John Young wrote:
> If you're over 30-35 all your best stuff was done in the old
> days. After that age you may think you're capable of good
> work but that's just the voice of experience taking the place
This depends on whether one is entering a new
If you're over 30-35 all your best stuff was done in the old
days. After that age you may think you're capable of good
work but that's just the voice of experience taking the place
of genuine challenge when you have to solve problems
to survive rather than steal from youngsters and call it
your ow
On Fri, Nov 16, 2001 at 10:31:24PM -0800, Petro wrote:
> Part of the energy in those days was people pushing in to vastly
> new territories, figuring out how to solve the hard problems--and there
> were a whole bunch back then. There are still lots of hard problems, but
> they come in dri
On Friday, November 16, 2001, at 08:29 PM, Faustine wrote:
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> Tim wrote:
>> The list has only 5% of the content it had in its glory years, 1992-95.
>> And perhaps only 10% of its content in its declining years, 1996-98.
>> It's now at about half the
On Fri, Nov 16, 2001 at 06:42:47PM -0500, Faustine wrote:
> Actually Congress is chock full of lightweights. And all their ratty
> little undereducated staffers who soak up whatever lobbyists and
> their shoddy two-bit partisan "guess tanks" happen to be shilling
> for this week. I know plenty of
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Tim wrote:
>The list has only 5% of the content it had in its glory years, 1992-95.
>And perhaps only 10% of its content in its declining years, 1996-98.
>It's now at about half the level of its senile years, 1999-2000. This
>past year has been the
t documents people here
> might find
> useful and interesting--and most importantly, being able to give my
> unvarnished
> opinion without, well, worrying too much about being rigorous and
> objective.
>
> For instance, if anyone wants to tell someone here to go fuck
>
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Gil wrote:
Faustine writes:
>Tim wrote:
>
> >Besides the above points, a "rigorous and objective analysis" is work
> >for bean counters...and is only interesting to other bean counters.
>So von Neumann, Kahn, Schelling
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Tim wrote:
>Besides the above points, a "rigorous and objective analysis" is work
>for bean counters...and is only interesting to other bean counters.
So von Neumann, Kahn, Schelling and Nash are boring, huh.
I'd rather follo
--
On 14 Nov 2001, at 0:52, Petro wrote:
> So did you discuss what was going to be done *after* the
> current government is destroyed? What sort of government
> will follow?
Preferably none whatsoever.
> Or was this just an exercise in later day
> bakuninism?
Bakunin was a m
On Wednesday, November 14, 2001, at 12:12 AM, Tim May wrote:
> Meanwhile, grey burrowcrats are burrowing into their burrows in D.C.,
> busily writing "rigorous and objective" reports on the benefits of
> welfare and why gun control is cost-effective. Feh. I hope to see the
On Tuesday, November 13, 2001, at 11:00 PM, Declan McCullagh wrote:
>
> Faustine says:
>> There's no reason you can't keep your hardcore beliefs to yourself
>> while
>> doing the most rigorous and objective analysis you can.
>
> This is an attractive, but
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