Lewis and Clark in Portland. It's not Harvard/Yale/Stanford, or close to it, but it places well in Oregon so I'm happy.
I haven't been to JD Underground, but I have been lurking on Top Law Schools for a few months. Yeah, the prospects are grim; Lewis and Clark grads have a 50% shot of landing a lawyer job after graduating. Going to law school is a gamble, but I haven't wanted anything as badly as this.
Put my nose to the grind, network like crazy, and hope I'm lucky enough to get a job.
Did everyone check their Gmail accounts today? Google has a nice April Fools prank going on there (it's certainly better than the lame one they made for YouTube this year).
All you need is a 7-dimensional manifold that chemically reacts with two different types of ink to produce red lines. If you're smart, the manifold doesn't even need to be 7-dimensional; you can use fewer dimensions than that.
Interesting math questions: What's the minimum number of dimensions you need for the manifold? What's the minimum number of Euclidean spatial dimensions you need to embed that manifold in?
I really wish Apple would make Lightening connectors into a common standard, because it's a really nice form factor. I understand why they aren't, but still.
Yeah I'd be all for Lightning, but only if it were a standard in place of USB for ALL my peripherals from my gaming mouses, keyboards, 3D mice, headphone power cables, flash drives, etc. If it was to be the standard great! I could plug in all my phones, and mice, and keyboards, and 3D mice, and headphones, and speakers, and flash drives, and funny glowing widgets? Cool by me.
Apple likely is not pushing for that to transpire though, they like control and proprietary and so that basically means they will appeal to those who swing strictly from the Apple tree, don't care about being limited to a shallow pool of peripherals, and few others.
USB-C I can get behind. Non-proprietary, simple, small... I dig it. I can see the scenario I ask for above taking place with that tech.
Comments
I haven't been to JD Underground, but I have been lurking on Top Law Schools for a few months. Yeah, the prospects are grim; Lewis and Clark grads have a 50% shot of landing a lawyer job after graduating. Going to law school is a gamble, but I haven't wanted anything as badly as this.
Put my nose to the grind, network like crazy, and hope I'm lucky enough to get a job.
Interesting math questions: What's the minimum number of dimensions you need for the manifold? What's the minimum number of Euclidean spatial dimensions you need to embed that manifold in?
But the old ones are so shitty.
This just in, 95% of Sonic lovers are furries.
Edit: Yep saw the name in one of the drawings.
Honey Maid deserves a medal for this one.
I'm asking because I just received this piece of news in my inbox today: Lightworks is coming to the Mac on June 11.
Or the new USB 3.1 connector that is a clear reaction to the Lightning cable: http://www.theverge.com/2014/4/2/5573680/first-images-of-the-reversible-usb-cable
Apple likely is not pushing for that to transpire though, they like control and proprietary and so that basically means they will appeal to those who swing strictly from the Apple tree, don't care about being limited to a shallow pool of peripherals, and few others.
USB-C I can get behind. Non-proprietary, simple, small... I dig it. I can see the scenario I ask for above taking place with that tech.