@Als i usually just ignore FB friend requests. however, I get upset when others do that. like, apparently, kevlin henney didn't want my FB friendship, although now after that request I see his postings (don't know how), which are pretty good. ok i'll accept that. i generally do when people ask repeatedly or give some reason. ;-)
@AlfPSteinbach: Well I don't know, I added you because, we were playing around here the other day and you found me on FB too, (remember u posted my pic here)....but then since you didn't accept the request i realized you didn't maybe want me to add you, so i thought you could have said so the same day when i said i will add you.
@RMartinhoFernandes Turkey is in the Eurovision song contest, and they're aplying for EU membership. It's pretty common to consider them part of Europe
Is it called the 'Scandinavian peninsula' because it's the part of Scandinavia that is a peninsula or because Scandinavia proper should be a peninsula? :)
@TonyTheLion I suspect it's touchy almost everywhere, for the simple reason that most people who want to immigrate somewhere are doing so (at least primarily) because they expect a higher standard of living there than wherever they were previously. As such, their current income (etc.) is probably below average for the new area, and they're much more willing to accept poorer pay, living conditions, etc.
@LewsTherin It's actually quite well written. Stroustrup's been working at Texas A&M as a professor the last few years, so he's gotten quite a bit of experience teaching C++ to real students.
@TonyTheLion Quite true -- primarily for exactly the reasons given. Immigration from Mexico (poor, high-crime, relatively poor educational system) is touchy. Immigration from Canada (relatively wealthy, excellent educational system, etc.) doesn't bother many people at all (not that a whole lot of Canadians particularly want to immigrate, but when/if they do, few people are bothered).
@Als I'm not really sure that's true any more. For the last decade, Denmark has been in full-on xenophobia mode. Sweden and Norway aren't anywhere near as bad, but still a bit worse than they used to be
@AlfPSteinbach yes, as in people learning the language from the beginning, not consultants going to "C++ Next" (or whatever) will will then go out to companies and conduct seminars for other people (who are probably the most experienced at their companies) who will finally mentor their juniors...
@Als probably yes, and you can't really blame them for making it hard, cause the native residents of that country should also have the chance for a job, and be the first ones to get it, which is I guess why the rules are so tight, so that there isn't a mass influx of immigrants that take all the jobs of the inhabitants of the country
But the purpose why these very countries allowed inhabitants is they didn't have enough resources to manage their own business, now the problem is the inhabitants have grown over above locals
@AlfPSteinbach Good or bad, what it means is that many of the C++ experts are accustomed to teaching the latest nuances to people who already know the language fairly well, not to relative beginners. Some (e.g., Scott Meyers) deal with that explicitly writing for somewhat more experienced programmers. Others (e.g., Schildt) are good at dealing with beginners, but don't know the subject matter. There aren't many others like Stroustrup who teach beginners well and know the language exceptionally well.
@jalf: Oh btw talking of Denmark, copenhagen, i once visited there and was very excited to see the very famous Little mermaid and in the end the mermaid turned out to be very little to my liking
LOL, meta users keep defending the deletion of my question as being triggered by nothing else but my use of the phrase "to fuck up" (not really directed at anybody, mind you). Well, if that is really so, I might just repost it after changing the "offending" phrase and see what happens to it then.
@jalf: Yeah, very famous actually, and then it is at one end of the city and at the end of it makes u feel weird that you made it all that way to see a small bronze statue that looks exactly the same as all those pictures
@Als you should have taken the short trip to Oslo and visited Vigelandsparken then. by the way we're getting a new statue park. this time with only statues of nakked wimmen :-) it was a bit controversial. but there is already restaurant.
probably, you won't get something as what you need but then you need to get onboard somewhere
and experience matters, so if i were you i would take something to get going, easier said than done but well i would say that is the way to go about it
I did a job but not so much in to what i loved looks better on a resume than i didn't do anything.
Today a bug on SO made all answerers appear as anonymous. There were a bunch of questions about it quickly springing up here on meta. Some got closed as dupes (fine), but one stayed open for a while. While we were still contemplating what happens in the chat, I checked other sites and found they ...
Right now, voting to close is probably justified: it's written as a suggestion (possibly a rant), not a question. Admittedly, much of what's on meta is really that way, but it gives a semi-reasonable excuse to close anyway.
@sbi Quite true -- don't get me wrong. I'm not saying they're anywhere close to blameless or justified here, only that you've still left them with a fairly easy excuse for sweeping your question under the rug, so to speak.
@JerryCoffin Yeah, but I set out reposting the original question minus the swear word. I already did a few very minor modifications, but I will not totally change the question unprompted. As @Als says, feel free to modify it now, though, if you think it's not worth the wait for how the meta police will deal with it.
> I like rewriting history, actually, and this build situation should never have existed. Now it doesn't. Also you're talking about a fifteen minute interval here.
@sbi Even if it remained open, I wouldn't have been able to edit it -- despite my rather higher rep on SO, my rep on meta is something like 250, so I can barely post things myself, and can't do much of anything else.
like Wikipedia, oh how "neutral", he he: "Two of the operations for which the Irgun is best known are the bombing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem on 22 July 1946 and the Deir Yassin massacre, carried out together with Lehi on 9 April 1948. The Irgun has been viewed as a terrorist organization or organization which carried out terrorist acts."
@AlfPSteinbach That much is arguably pretty accurate: it's undoubtedly true that at least a few people did view them as terrorists. Virtually the only difference between "freedom fighter" and "terrorist" is whether the speaker approves [of|likes] the [people|organization|whatever] involved.
@AlfPSteinbach An organization can carry out terrorist acts yet not be viewed as a terrorist organization (e.g. it does other stuff and terrorist acts may only be one of their overall means). I have no idea whether it is the case in your example, but if some consider the organization terrorist as a whole, and others only make note of the acts, what are you going to put down?
@sbi Somehow, despite having reviewed at least a few hundred suggested edits from low-rep users, I'd somehow managed to forget that the same would apply to me... Oh well, maybe next time.
I think we live in very much a propaganda world. Like, Norwegian newspapers recently reported a remarkable operating theater in Libya, found only 100 meters from a hospital. But that was buried in the article, which made it look like a sex toy thing used by Col Ghadaffi.
@AlfPSteinbach Quite true. OTOH, I think this here Internet thingy has helped a bit, at least for most of us. Here in the US, home of freedom (etc.), it used to be nearly impossible to get even a hint at what Al Jazeera (for one obvious example) had to say about most things.
@KerrekSB The link has to be the only thing in that message. You need to be quick, preferably with the link already in the paste buffer, so you post your intro, then the link by itself in the next message.
@KianMayne When I was much younger, I once shared such a cubicle for some time in a long flight across the Atlantic. I guess today we would have risked being arrested for that. :)