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> Historically this has been true, but nowadays it's not (at least in the US).

Not true in 1990. Very true today. The Bush tax cuts inaugurated the current era of class warfare. I'd say 2010 is when it really got going.



A presentation by SPJ left me with the impression that FP should be pointing to Miranda and several other languages that became Haskell, rather than to Haskell itself.



The second link doesn't even have any comments...what value does that add to the discussion?


This is from 1996, and has been submitted at least 3 times. What value does the discussion really have?


I din't know what value it actually has, but it potentially:

1. Is exposed to people who weren't reading HN the first two times around. If HN is growing, that's a fairly safe bet. These people benefit from discussing the idea and working things out for themselves instead of simply readingwhat has been said before, for the same reason that to learn math you do math, you don't just read about math.

2. Might be relevant to things that didn't exist the first two times around. Maybe someone will comment about how this depiction relates to jresig's attempt to teach programming with JavaScript at the Khan Academy, or some such.

Both of these potential values have a common proposition: That while the post hasn't changed since 1996, the world has changed since 1996.


He meant that pedantically posting the link to a previous empty discussion adds nothing to this new discussion.



The Cato paper that Branson references was written by salon.com blogger Glenn Greenwald and is available to read online at Cato's website: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=10080


The equivalent is actually "A copy of Oracle at home." SAP started with just the ERP product.


http://prepaid-phones.t-mobile.com/monthly-4g-plans

It's the one with this disclaimer: "New activations only. Available exclusively in-store at Walmart, on Walmart.com, and T-Mobile.com."

They also released this $200 phone to go along with the plan: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/26/samsung-exhibit-ii-4g-to-...


No.



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