Candydoc
Cosmonaut
yao at gmail.com
Wed Mar 26 15:30:31 PDT 2008
Ty Tower escribió:
> Frank Benoit wrote:
>
>> Georg Wrede schrieb:
>>> Not that I'm endorsing his writings/attitude, but one has to give
>>> Ty credit for not hiding his identity.
>> Are you really sure about the identity part?
>>
>> I think even with this measurement, he does not deserve credit.
>
>
> Look above for a list of the real wankers on this NG
>
> Don't waste your time Georg just ignore them . I can see at least you
> don't follow like a sheep. A fox on the edge is a far better way.
> "We few . We happy few. We band of brothers" Henry V
>
> As for Billingsley , another kid starting out with a big mouth and
> ill-considered values -probably black ? from Pittsburgh. Racism is
> not an issue until suddenly you experience it with a new neighbour ,
> then values change and the mouth slows down
>
> Poor old Dad couldn't resist
> #
>
> By Kris Billingsley on Aug 21, 2007
>
> That’s my boy! Yes, I’m the proud Dad of this Jarrett person. Jarrett
> surpassed my self taught programming skills when he was 13 or 14. I
> supported my family for many years using languages we don’t want to
> get into here.
>
> My boy will go far. I’m so proud I could burst my buttons. Please
> excuse me…
>
>
> And this tells me he tends to fall in love with men ! so watch your
> backs.
>
> Your DSource profile says you are a CS student. Which year are you in
> now? What is the most interesting course you’ve taken so far?
>
> I’m currently a CS student at the University of Pittsburgh. I’ve just
> completed my second year, so if all goes well I should have two years
> left, unless I decide to go to graduate school.
>
> So far, most of the classes I’ve taken in CS have been introductory
> classes — programming, some computational theory, logic. They
> reserve most of the fun classes for the upper-level students ;) If I
> had to choose from the ones that I’ve taken, though, it would have to
> be my “Computer Organization and Assembly Language” course (CS 0447
> at Pitt). The course was about the basic architecture of computer
> processors, getting down into the register file and the ALU and
> microprogramming and such, which I found interesting in and of
> itself. The main reason I liked the course so much, though, was the
> professor, Dr. Mark Kahrs. He doesn’t teach the class very often,
> but I’m very glad I had him. He was one of the few professors I’ve
> had who seemed genuinely excited about the material he was teaching.
> He always had a plan, he came up with challenging assignments (write
> an emulator for an old vector graphics device in MIPS assembly!), his
> tests actually tested your ability to think and reason rather than
> memorize, and he knew what he was talking about. I really respect
> the man and hope I have the opportunity to take another class with
> him.
>
Idiot.
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