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> I consider this a "black armband".

So HN is to SOPA as the SUV driver with the "Support Our Troops" magnet was to the occupation of Afghanistan/Iraq?


If it's the "Support our Troops ... end this war" variant.

And the SUV is a Prius. Or bicycle.


Looks like Google is using Lisp (a Scheme dialect, to be precise) as part of their Android App Inventor:

http://appinventor.googlelabs.com/about/


1) do you consider shootout results to be reliable?

2) can you show some of these results where common lisp is at least 10x slower than java?


Horror stories where people don't read the ToS and then complain loudly on the internet because they aren't abiding by them?


I had an automatic 2000 Chevy Cavalier that I drove lightly around my second home when I visited it every few weeks. About 2 years in I came to red light and, in applying the brake, it fought as though I was stomping on the gas pedal. I regularly drive stick so I popped it in neutral as I brought it to the side of the road and the engine kept revving despite neither of my feet being on any pedal.

I turned off the car and re-started it without any problems so I took it to my mechanic down the street and had a friend pick me up. The mechanic gave a full run-through and basically didn't believe me.

I drove the car around for another few months without incident until I was taking a longer drive at night on I-95. The car started unexpectedly accelerating so I removed both feet from the pedals and it kept speeding up.

Long story short, this happened several more times (I have low risk-aversion) despite having the electrical system replaced and having numerous mechanics that I know and trust look at it. Before I just gave up on it (annoyed - I like to know what is wrong) one of my mechanics took it out for a drive just to try it out and had it got away from him as well. We never did figure out what caused it.


Right, I want to be clear: I'm not saying cars don't accelerate on their own. In your case, you had an actual mechanical problem and did the right thing which prevented a tragedy. I knew a Ford Taurus owner with that sort of problem, as well. My point was that the big-story cases with Toyota (and Audi of the past) focus on these harrowing "I was pressing the brake as so hard that I hurt my ankle" kind of stories where we're not allowed to second guess the driver's actions.

There was a case in Minneapolis some years back where a police van accelerated, from a stop, and killed at least one person during some festival of lights thing. What they found, eventually, was that the police department wiring modifications from the stock van (to get the cherries and strobes working correctly) could cause the police vans to accelerate on their own. It wasn't a manufacturer issue, but it was still scary stuff.


That's fair enough. I've driven long enough to see that we all do plenty of stupid-enough things in a fully-functioning car.


Did the car have drive by wire? My pickup ('84 toyota) had a sticky throttle plate. Only just enough to make it idle way too high, not enough for runaway acceleration, (and some wd-40 fixed it), but could happen to other cars too I imagine.


This is a non-sensical argument. Where did you get this false spectrum of creative <-> focused from?


I've read it somewhere too. It makes sense if you think about it. In certain types of ADHD, the hyperactiity is in the thoughts. So the person would have more thoughts racing through his or her head than normal and this probably constitutes the creativity since they have more random thoughts to seed a good idea. The drive for this is thought to be caused by understimulation. In other words the mind is bored, so we start racing through thoughts to try to make something more exciting. What Adderall does is stimulate your mind so that it's no longer bored. Less random thoughts are needed and the person can focus on one thing better. Of course, the random thoughts, which constituted the creativity, is traded off. It's actually my theory behind how it works (I have ADHD).


It's a pretty common belief. I've seen it numerous times online, not sure if I've ever seen it tested though.


They drank Flavor Aid, not Kool Aid.


No information at all with respect to industry or responsibilities?


Seriously as someone in the area who might be interested, I'd feel weird sending around my resume/contact info without at least knowing what kind of industry the work would be in.


When I google for a bug/question in Python, I invariably find remarks about the same Python I am using (CPython, the effective standard and single implementation that works on all platforms equally well which all users have rallied around).

When I google about the same for whichever of the multitude of Common Lisp implementations exist out there, I have to filter down to which one as well as which platform.

That is a tremendous difference, especially for newcomers.

As for "actual" support, given the focus on a single implementation (which I understand and like that it is not possible with CL), when you need to hire some random consultant service, you don't have to do the same thing when filtering prospective people.


Is the guy on the right wiping his nose on his shirt or sniffing his arm pit? Not to be picky but that immediately shot out at me when the page came up.

In any event, the world needs more of these.


He is probably wiping sweat off his face on his sleeve. Bangalore and more so, Ahmedabad can get hot and humid.


Ah, it randomly loads them.

In that case, this one: http://iaccelerator.org/wp-content/themes/primepress/headers...


You should probably do them a favor and fire off an email if you think it's bad PR.


I liked it. Bunch of good ole desi boys hanging out. I am tired of the faux-posh bollywood look.


What's with the crazy devil-eyes cat as a header?


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