I have a VM on which IP is not set.(Seems it got ipv6). When I logged into the VM manually and ran the command /etc/init.d/network restart, I got the IP. So is there any way to run this command from CLI?
But it depends. For example, if I'm applying for a Node.js position, I'll send my server-side letter. If it's iOS/Mobile, then I'll send my mobile letter, and so on
@Unihedro Read your email now. Actually, you living in the East is good because starting the migration in the middle of the night(Brazilian time) will need someone with a distinct time zone :P
> We have an International Cashier Bank Draft/Cheque package worth the sum of $800,000.00 USD in your name at our office. Open attachment for more details.
@Unihedro I should reply to my spams asking the technologies they used developing the virus. The smartest are Assembly because the virus must communicate on low-level with the processor.
Oh sure. But doing a sophisticated virus, hidden inside some file, with an AUTORUN for Windows, that targets users via a web crawler running on 5% of the web, the damage it would cause. Of course, I'd go to jail, but that's not the point.
Yeah. Also, a smart idea would be, writing with details the proposal on the e-mail, and then inviting the person who received the e-mail to watch the curriculum of the sender. And at this page, the virus will auto-download itself and run an Assembly program for getting all the user's actions. From that, use NLP and ML for generating statistics.
Not keeping it on an attachment, but instead buying a domain and inviting them to see your website. Of course, web design in the e-mail will be an important factor there.
I'm originally a non-coffee drinking chemist but dropped being a chemist to discover that I truly enjoyed programming and coffee. You love chemistry? Nice :)
To begin with, a web service with an API that changes every two builds with no backwards compatibility whatsoever isn't a good sign.
To add, you have a web service that doesn't even access its own API from the website, instead the website is a plugin that makes the client poll the information from the API.
And the API is throttled!
As a direct result, the UI is broken and doesn't do what it's supposed to. Sometimes the lights flicker when they're not supposed to, et cetera.
And the support sucks, and the moderation system sucks, and no way to flag spam messages.
the guys at PHP also researches on The Awesomeness Of Programming Languages and compared the Famousness VS Usability Ratio (FVUR) and published a short article.
PHP turns out to be the worst, followed by assembly, followed by scala, then java.
#PHP:
Concurrency Level: 200
Time taken for tests: 574.796 seconds
Complete requests: 2000
#node.js:
Concurrency Level: 200
Time taken for tests: 41.887 seconds
Complete requests: 2000
hey, I know you guys are young so you quick on judging... the thing is php is not really slower than js. The way it is usually used it will be slower, yes. But if you use it as you'd use js (create a listener inside a php script) then php would not have to get ready the whole vm for each request just like node doesn't have to. Try it if you want, my bet is on php being actually faster ;)
HTML is great for declaring static documents, but it falters when we try to use it for declaring dynamic views in web-applications. AngularJS lets you extend HTML vocabulary for your application. The resulting environment is extraordinarily expressive, readable, and quick to develop.
@nikita2206 No, it isn't. Node.js uses listeners; PHP uses a server. Node.js isn't always 14x faster than PHP. But, on most cases, it is at least 5x faster than PHP. Of course, Facebook's PHP is faster than my Node.js but there's a lot here. Also, if I did use Node.js Clusters with that 8 core server, my server would be 20x faster as the normal PHP on an 8 core server. Get it?
In computing, a virtual machine (VM) is an emulation of a particular computer system. Virtual machines operate based on the computer architecture and functions of a real or hypothetical computer, and their implementations may involve specialized hardware, software, or a combination of both.
Classification of virtual machines can be based on the degree to which they implement functionality of targeted real machines. That way, system virtual machines (also known as full virtualization VMs) provide a complete substitute for the targeted real machine and a level of functionality required for th...
That's a JVM, it's different from a Java runtime because the Java runtime is a representation of the source layer of a JIT compliance process.
JVMs run par Java VM specs and follow contracts of the Java runtimes.
They are different things!
Ok, let me be more specific here. The Java runtime is constructed when you load a Java program. It reads the opcode compiled by the Java compiler (I use javac) and therefore define a contract. It creates and allocates memory for the Java Virtual Machine and gives it the contract.
Now the JVM runs with both JIT and native layer code to make the contract from the Java runtime work.
@GabrielTomitsuka I'll say it again - you can do the same thing in PHP, you can run a listener in a PHP script, you can even use pthreads library to have threading in PHP in order to squeeze some more performance out of it.
You can not do the same thing in PHP with the same conditions You cannot get around limitations of performance with listeners in its instance The pthreads library only creates asynchronous IO, it doesn't change the way PHP instances behave
@nikita2206 I hope you do realize I don't write a lot. I treasure how many taps I perform because my keyboard has a short lifecycle.
In fact, each of its keys will die after five hundred taps.
PHP has a VM, in other words it's what you feed opcodes to and it executes them, this is what VM is - an abstraction that runs on other abstraction (which is opcodes) and produces not so abstract results
@Unihedro what do you mean, by the same conditions?