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  3. Clever Americans

Clever Americans

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  • S S Douglas

    Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:

    Hello, everybody! It's good to be back.

    Welcome back, how was your weekend away?


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    Vikram A Punathambekar
    wrote on last edited by
    #12

    My 5-day weekend was awesome, thank you! :-D

    Cheers, Vikram.


    "But nowadays, it means nothing. Features are never frozen, development keeps happening, bugs never get fixed, and documentation is something you might find on wikipedia." - Marc Clifton on betas.

    Join the CP group at NationStates. Password: byalmightybob

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    • B Brady Kelly

      A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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      hairy_hats
      wrote on last edited by
      #13

      Dilbert.

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      • H hairy_hats

        Dilbert.

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        Brady Kelly
        wrote on last edited by
        #14

        :-D

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        • V Vivi Chellappa

          Richie308 wrote:

          Alan Turing

          Alan Turing was very much a Britisher.

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          hairy_hats
          wrote on last edited by
          #15

          On a related note, so was the warship which captured the Enigma codes from a German U-boat. :-)

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          • B Brady Kelly

            A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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            Andrew Torrance
            wrote on last edited by
            #16

            The USA has had more winners of Nobel prizes than any other country . They lead the world in many forms of technology . But the clever dumb balance must be maintained (its a fundemental law of nature). And to balance the clever ness you voted in Bush (twice) , have the worlds most stupid gun laws, have a highly peverted view of history , and a very dubious relationship with your flag .

            Bad code does not kill apps , assumptions do.

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            • B Brady Kelly

              A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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              Eric Goedhart
              wrote on last edited by
              #17

              Hi, Jim Clark: Geometery Engine (3D chip 1979)

              With friendly greetings,:) Eric Goedhart Interbritt

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              • V Vikram A Punathambekar

                My 5-day weekend was awesome, thank you! :-D

                Cheers, Vikram.


                "But nowadays, it means nothing. Features are never frozen, development keeps happening, bugs never get fixed, and documentation is something you might find on wikipedia." - Marc Clifton on betas.

                Join the CP group at NationStates. Password: byalmightybob

                V Offline
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                vijay_aroli
                wrote on last edited by
                #18

                Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:

                My 5-day weekend was awesome

                Good. And my 5-day weekend will start from this wednesday.:)

                Regards, Vijay. God may not give us what we 'want', but he surely gives us what we 'need'.

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                • B Brady Kelly

                  A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #19

                  Here[^] is a start.

                  "I'm a great believer in luck, and I find the harder I work the more I have of it." - Thomas Jefferson

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                  • H hairy_hats

                    Dilbert.

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                    Dan Neely
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #20

                    Wally He's maintianed a white collar job for decades without ever doing the least bit of work. That pts him well above dilbert and alice.

                    -- CleaKO The sad part about this instance is that none of the users ever said anything [about the problem]. Pete O`Hanlon Doesn't that just tell you everything you need to know about users?

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                    • B Brady Kelly

                      A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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                      skornel
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #21

                      Just remind him that both the PC and the Mac were inventerd by clever Americans.

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                      • B Brady Kelly

                        A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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                        Blake Miller
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #22

                        Here are two exmaples of what I call being clever. 1. You are given 20 tough electrical circuits problems to 'solve' and are told the algebraic solution is worth 17 points a problem and the numerical answer is worth an additional 3 points. You decide to obtain the algebraic solution to as many problems as possible within the 2 hours alloted for the test, because your professor has said all semester that it takes an engineer to solve the problem and any monkey can plug in the numbers. So you finish 17 of the problems and get the algebraic solution correct for all of them. 17 * 17 = 289. The highest score in the history of the test, prior to this one, was 11 * 20 = 220. Of course, the semester and every one forever after this trick was pulled off you had to attempt to derive the numerical answer to get any credit for the problem. Just thinking outside the box, and future EE students at UAB will forever hate me for that one :cool: 2. You are told to write a PID controller in 68000 assembly language that runs on the Commodore Amiga the interface is via a command line - no GUI required. The only way to get any source code in or out of the Amiga is by way of a Prime 5350 (if I recall correctly) - since they took out the Amiga's floppy drive. There is only 1 Commodore Amiga for the entire class of 32 students - so some resource contention is bound to occur. You decide staying up at 2:00 AM for some time on the Amiga is not an option. You course load is pretty heavy so totally learning and hand coding 68000 assembly language is probably out of the question as well. So the best solution to this problem seems to be to use the Microsoft C compiler and write in very strict generic C language on the IBM PC (dozens of those available) a PID controller that works and is totally debuggged. Then download the C source code to the Amiga and run its Aztec C compiler and let it emit the 68000 assembly language. Give some of the labels meaningful names like IncreaseMotorSpeed instead of L0000_01. Assemble it, test, and done! Total time spent on Amiga, about 1 hour. Total time spent learning 68000 Assembly language, about 2 hours. That is what I call being clever. Never was it stated WORKING at the Amiga was a requirement, nor was it stated LEARNING 68000 Assembly language was a reuqirement. They wanted a PID controller in 68000 assembly language that would run on the Amiga - product delivered thank you very much :cool: My two exmaples of being clever. Brighter students in

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                        • B Brady Kelly

                          A cocky Mac user has just told me that a Windows power user is an oxymoron, like a clever American. I would like to give a few hundred examples (besides present company on CP) of clever Americans, but I have too much sifting to do to find those that really stand out. I'm looking for really clever Americans, quantum physics etc. Please contribute.

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                          Jasmine2501
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #23

                          Einstein was American... after a while. I've always thought the beautiful thing about Americans is there is really only one group of *natives* here, but we all claim to be uniquely American in some way. The natives invented a lot of things that the Europeans took and called their own. Everyone else is an import, but just as American as Einstein. As a country, we have contributed many inventions to the world, but not as many as people might think.

                          "Quality Software since 1983!"
                          http://www.smoothjazzy.com/ - see the "Programming" section for freeware tools and articles.

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