--- Jim Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Meaning that 150,000 engineers are employed in
Bangalore? Does this
include software engineers, HTML coders,
programmers, computer scientists?
Computer scientists are very few. Most engineering
colleges and teachers emphasis simple on coding. If
you
On Wed, 2004-01-07 at 18:36, Steve Mynott wrote:
Jim Dixon wrote:
The term 'software engineer' is becoming less common in the States these
days. I have watched the job title wax and wane for more than twenty
five years. I think that it was most fashionable in the early 1980s.
Any
The great American experiment finally fizzled on December 1, 2003, when the US Supreme
Court declined to hear an appeal from a 9th Federal Circuit decision which gutted the
Second Amendment. It was a nice run - over two hundred years.
As of December 1, 2003, the US Supreme Court issued its
Steve Mynott wrote:
Jim Dixon wrote:
The term 'engineer' is far from precise; in the UK most people who work
with tools can be called engineers but people who write software
generally
are NOT called engineers. There are further complications: for
example, in
I have had jobs as a software
At 01:27 PM 1/6/04 -0800, Steve Schear wrote:
Try building and finding a place to launch an amateur rocket (it can be
done, but now only with the greatest of regulatory red tape). I did.
Some
of my group's rockets achieved heights over 100,000 ft (confirmed by
Edward's AFB radar.)
Yeah, but
Cross posting on multiple nodes since none seem reliable.
Now that LNE is shutting down ... are there actually any other reliable
operational nodes? Have subscribed to minder.net, algebra.com, and
ds.pro-ns.net all in the last two weeks to no avail. Some return
subscribed message but never