The construction is pretty damned interesting. It also let me know that he didn't sit for three days straight and count to 100,000, which was the only reason I would have watched the video.
Also, I rediscovered UNIQLOCK, which actually is something I could watch for three days straight.
I woke one evening to my partners family Schipperke cutting sick at something in the garden shed. Upon investigating we discovered this tiny dog had cornered an even smaller Devil behind the mower. Devil was released and we then had pancakes.
I used to have one of those but it was UFO-shaped. It kinda sucked though because you have to put exactly the right amount of helium in the balloon to make it boyant.
Though, I should note, the "Overwhelming Britishness" he mentions is very much a Western-Australia thing, rather than an east-coast thing. It's present here, certainly - undeniably so - but not as strongly over in the west.
Joe Santoli is the owner of Digital Press, what many consider the best video game store in the US. He is raising money to create a real video game museum go donate.
Over the past 6 years (a wierd change in patterns happens in 2005): C is plunging pretty steadily, Java is fairly stable, C++ is either stable or growing slightly, with Python and Ruby growing quickly. It is difficult to tell from the linked plot, but it appears that Ruby has stabilized while Python continues to grow.
Also interesting, according to this graph, C, Java, and C++ are currently pretty evenly distributed across the tracked projects.
You can modify the plot to include C# or other proprietary, non-portable languages, but I prefer to pretend they don't exist.
Heaven forbid someone is talking sense in the Youtube comments , but :
Horrible...just look at all the tire tracks on the ground. How many takes did it take for him to make this junk? Perhaps he should try practicing for WRC instead of making this garbage, then maybe he wouldnt be at the bottom of the rankings for the second consecutive year
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Also, I rediscovered UNIQLOCK, which actually is something I could watch for three days straight.
Devil was released and we then had pancakes.
Though, I should note, the "Overwhelming Britishness" he mentions is very much a Western-Australia thing, rather than an east-coast thing. It's present here, certainly - undeniably so - but not as strongly over in the west.
What other sport could offer up something this apparently messed up at a superficial glance at the professional level?
Over the past 6 years (a wierd change in patterns happens in 2005): C is plunging pretty steadily, Java is fairly stable, C++ is either stable or growing slightly, with Python and Ruby growing quickly. It is difficult to tell from the linked plot, but it appears that Ruby has stabilized while Python continues to grow.
Also interesting, according to this graph, C, Java, and C++ are currently pretty evenly distributed across the tracked projects.
You can modify the plot to include C# or other proprietary, non-portable languages, but I prefer to pretend they don't exist.
On second thought, I do give a fuck, but I really like this picture.
I died and went to guinea pig heaven.