Hehe. "C++ for Dummies", 4th edition, page 71: "So I said, 'Waiter! Waiter! There's a bug in my soup!' and he says, 'Sorry, sir, the chef used to program computers'"Lithorien wrote:Then again, there's nothing wrong with being a chef who programs as a hobby, right?
Childhood dreams
Re: Childhood dreams
Re: Childhood dreams
Not particularly, but it's something I'm (at least) good at.JackScott wrote:As long as that's where you want to be, then yes, being a chef is awesome.
I'd honestly love to be able to afford to go to a good college and graduate school and get a Master's degree in Comp. Sci with an emphasis in operating system / general security, but I'm a good $80,000-$120,000 short of that! Still, I think I have a few half-baked ideas that I could explore and maybe one of them would be useful someday...
At least with cooking, you can work your way up from the bottom. And it's a job where I use my hands and move around a lot, so I feel accomplished at the end of the day. And I make people smile - genuinely - which I love more than basically anything else.
I guess 'confused' describes where I am now.
Re: Childhood dreams
Hi,
Mate, that's all that matters.I gave up a high paying job (yet frustrating) to do what I love to do .Now I analyze os crash dumps/bugs day long ! fixed bugs == satisfied customers .
--Thomas
.At least with cooking, you can work your way up from the bottom. And it's a job where I use my hands and move around a lot, so I feel accomplished at the end of the day. And I make people smile - genuinely - which I love more than basically anything else.
Mate, that's all that matters.I gave up a high paying job (yet frustrating) to do what I love to do .Now I analyze os crash dumps/bugs day long ! fixed bugs == satisfied customers .
Do no give the heck about degree, you can learn lots of stuff online.Just believe in yourself . But then we all are human beings, no one is perfect, we have our weaknesses though .I'd honestly love to be able to afford to go to a good college and graduate school and get a Master's degree in Comp. Sci with an emphasis in operating system / general security, but I'm a good $80,000-$120,000 short of that!
--Thomas
Re: Childhood dreams
Yeah, me too! I've always wanted to fly, and every day I get closer.JackScott wrote:Briefly, it's about how to achieve your childhood dreams, and how to help others achieve theirs. So I ask the question, what are your childhood dreams, and have you achieved them?
- I want to be a pilot. I haven't done this yet, but it's only a matter of a lot of money before I do.
I'd also like to know more than one language.
David
President of the Useless OS project
Re: Childhood dreams
- Be a potter - not sure why I wanted this as a child, this one faded away and was replaced with the desire to be a programmer but I have made a couple of clay items since if that counts.
- Live in an underground bunker, with a lab - I guess this might have had something to do with games Metal Gear Solid & Half-Life for the bunker part and Resident Evil for the lab part but also I've always loved experimenting and just about all sciences, I suppose the bunker idea could be the ultimate boy's den? Can't say I've done this yet so it will probably come after fulfilling iv.
- Live in Canada or Alaska - Metal Gear Solid might have had some influence on this,I haven't done this yet but it probably wouldn't coincide with ii and I don't think I'd want to live in the middle of the Canadian or Alaska wilderness for more than a couple of years.
- Be ludicrously rich - a fairly straight forward one, still haven't surpassed the financial status of a bum yet but hopefully v will help out on this one!
- Be a programmer - my parents said there was money to be made as a programmer which seemed appealing to me as programmers can make games, and I certainly like those! This is the only one I can fairly confidently say I am by the fact that I program
p.s. it's not really directly from my childhood but I'd really like to fly helicopters but don't have much interest in normal plane flight.
Re: Childhood dreams
I'd like that too, but I can't do both, too much money. Specifically, I've always wanted to land a jet on a carrier. But this can only be done if one joins the Navy. Oh well.Code0x58 wrote:p.s. it's not really directly from my childhood but I'd really like to fly helicopters but don't have much interest in normal plane flight.
President of the Useless OS project
Re: Childhood dreams
... and the speed of light.Solar wrote:...as the only constant in life is change. ...
- Bobman801 -
Re: Childhood dreams
...in vacuum.bobman801 wrote:... and the speed of light.Solar wrote:...as the only constant in life is change. ...
Every good solution is obvious once you've found it.
Re: Childhood dreams
Nononono... the speed of light is constant. It's the space-time that's distorted by gravity, not the speed of light.
Every good solution is obvious once you've found it.
- Owen
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Re: Childhood dreams
Solar is pretty much saying what the laws of Physics sayberkus wrote:I'd disagree. You cannot know that for sure.Solar wrote:Nononono... the speed of light is constant. It's the space-time that's distorted by gravity, not the speed of light.
In fact, I'd say that c is the most constant of all the physical constants. Many of the initially non-intuitive theorems and laws come from the fact that the universe will bend over backwards to prevent c from changing.
Re: Childhood dreams
If it'll bend over backwards does that mean that we can travel through time if we find a way to make it possible iff c is constant?Owen wrote:.. the universe will bend over backwards to prevent c from changing.
- Owen
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Re: Childhood dreams
Relativity already tells you what you need to do to travel through time/travel at superluminal speeds (They're one and the same): Possess negative energy.Candy wrote:If it'll bend over backwards does that mean that we can travel through time if we find a way to make it possible iff c is constant?Owen wrote:.. the universe will bend over backwards to prevent c from changing.
Yeah, good luck with that one
Re: Childhood dreams
If only we could find the overflows in the universeOwen wrote:Relativity already tells you what you need to do to travel through time/travel at superluminal speeds (They're one and the same): Possess negative energy.
- NickJohnson
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Re: Childhood dreams
Let x = ...999999Candy wrote:If only we could find the overflows in the universeOwen wrote:Relativity already tells you what you need to do to travel through time/travel at superluminal speeds (They're one and the same): Possess negative energy.
9x = ...999990 = x-9
10x = -9
x = -1
(of course, this only really works mod 10^n as n approaches infinity...)
Re: Childhood dreams
Shouldn't that be:
x = 0.999... gives
10x = 9.999...
10x - x = 9.999... - 0.999... = 9 gives
9x = 9 gives
x = 1
so 0.999... is the same as 1
x = 0.999... gives
10x = 9.999...
10x - x = 9.999... - 0.999... = 9 gives
9x = 9 gives
x = 1
so 0.999... is the same as 1
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