Most of the arguments made seem to suggest there is discrimination in CS education, and subsequently in the workspace.
Even if we assume this to be true, How does this explain the lack of women in open source projects?
Further, the author seems to reserve a special place for the Rockstar developer. Personally having been rescued a few times by such Rockstar coworker's all nighters, I have only respect and awe for such Rockstars.
Good advice on drinking water only after about 30 minutes after the meal. A useful side effect of this optimized digestion process is significantly reduced burping! :-)
Also don't eat anything at least 3-4 hours before you sleep. This creates a period of extended fasting while you sleep, which helps with weight loss.
Pretty cool demo. I use Vimperator[1] to do most of my browsing. The experience is quite good. It would be interesting if Tab Candy will have apis to drive these features. Then vimperator commands could call them like,
:group Work - current tab into the Work group
:switch Todo - switch to the Todo group
etc
The features look great. But after using Vimperator, I prefer keyboard alternatives to the drag-and-drop stuff shown.
I'm curious as to how the elections are going to change this policy. As suggested in the thread, they are trying to keep things quiet until the elections.
However what happens if the Labor party loses. Is the opposition going to support this as well?
The data on India is interesting. I would have thought there would be more than 50 million internet users in India. That's only about 4 per 100 people.
There are more poor people in eight states of India than in the 26 countries of sub-Saharan Africa
That doesn't say anything about the poverty rate.
When the vast central Indian Madhya Pradesh state, which has a population of 70 million, was compared with the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the war-racked African state of 62 million inhabitants, the two were found to have near-identical levels of poverty.
So that means certain parts of India have equal or greater levels of poverty than certain parts of Africa. But the poverty rate as a whole is lower.
Even if we assume this to be true, How does this explain the lack of women in open source projects?
Further, the author seems to reserve a special place for the Rockstar developer. Personally having been rescued a few times by such Rockstar coworker's all nighters, I have only respect and awe for such Rockstars.