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Get a pair of pliers with thin enough handles that will fit inside the holes of the blade. Then turn to either tighten or loosen the wheel. If you need more leverage, you can put the vise grips on the plier head. If you damage the blade you will be in a world of hurt. Never use one of those without a full face shield.
Uncle Bob says programmers choose the computers at their companies. I don't think that has ever been my experience. When IBM first started producing PCs, they gave them to the Mainframe Salespeople who gave them to CTOs as presents. The CTOs didn't know what to do with them and stuck them in a closet. My experience was that microcomputers were introduced into companies by CTOs to control peripherals that IBM and DEC would not allow them to connect to the mainframes and minicomputers, for branch networks in Banks, and Wall Street quants who didn't want their formulae on insecure mainframes. These were architectural decisions and had nothing to do with programming languages. I was at Sun during the dotcom boom. Unlike its competitors, Sun's computers were web-ready, configured with massive numbers of threads, etc. The Salespeople were selling hardware to CTOs and threw in Professional Services for free. Our ability to readily create scalable Client-Server systems using Java and JSPs landed a lot of sales, and further lucrative work.
James Gosling was at the language naming brainstorming session where people were drinking Peet's Java and someone suggested "Java", but no one remembers who it was. Some were dead set against Java as the name because they wanted descriptive names for it and a related product(s). Java and Silk may have been the only two names approved by legal at the time management insisted a name be chosen.
Gotta be careful man. Take a big enough chip outta that disk or dent/damage it the balance will be off. When you're talking 13k 15k RPMs on a thick piece of metal that could get seriously dangerous. Man, you're really playing with fire doing that.
I’m a fellow software engineer/digital marketing analyst. I also love to get dirt under my fingernails and grab a chainsaw or grinder whenever possible. I’m really thankful for this one. You rock my friend. You saved me from overtightening mine.
You can get it off with your hands you just gotta really get in there and crank it. Try throwing in a twist during the up and down motion to get it off.
Is that the Bauer cup from Harbor? How did you like it for grinding? I ended up using the Hercules turbo cup and it took me quite a while to grind but worked out in the end.
I believe that black button on top is the Spindle Lock Button…press it in and rotate the spindle until it locks then rotate the wheel - of course you’ll unplug (or remove the battery from) the tool first.
during a power play, this type of goal is not THAT uncommon from that spot. Many players could bury that shot on the PP no less, he had miles of space. It was a nice shot, sure. Was not anything extraordinary. Not to say Bedard isn't or won't be great, but cmon. It was a pretty nice goal I guess. But your comment implies that a handful of players could do it lol.
Please thumbs up the vid and reshare this video in order to give the middle finger to the GM. I came from the Burbs, over an hour drive during my work day to see this practice. Kyle Davidson was a prick the other day. Showing his true colors. Told me to stop recording. Had Fifth Third Arena shut down my tripod and iphone. I don't want anything to do with that arena anymore and Davidson can f off. Lost all respect for the GM. That arena due to Kyle, have slowly been shutting off more and more to the public. It's getting to the point where you won't even be able to watch practices anymore. Fifth Third Arena isn't even showing their practices on their Calendar anymore. I come to Fifth Third for Stick & Puck, was going to join some mens leagues. Screw them. They interrogated me. For God sakes, my sister runs Autism Hockey program for Grand Rapids Mi, I'm no threat! I use this arena and play in it yet they treated me like some kind of criminal. Before Kyle, there was none of this BS with fans. Micromanaging and prohibiting pictures or video.
Please thumbs up the vid and reshare this video in order to give the middle finger to the GM. I came from the Burbs, over an hour drive during my work day to see this practice. Kyle Davidson was a prick the other day. Showing his true colors. Told me to stop recording. Had Fifth Third Arena shut down my tripod and iphone. I don't want anything to do with that arena anymore and Davidson can f off. Lost all respect for the GM. That arena due to Kyle, have slowly been shutting off more and more to the public. It's getting to the point where you won't even be able to watch practices anymore. Fifth Third Arena isn't even showing their practices on their Calendar anymore. I come to Fifth Third for Stick & Puck, was going to join some mens leagues. Screw them. They interrogated me. For God sakes, my sister runs Autism Hockey program for Grand Rapids Mi, I'm no threat! I use this arena and play in it yet they treated me like some kind of criminal. Before Kyle, there was none of this BS with fans. Micromanaging and prohibiting pictures or video.
You can’t use the cheesey wrench that comes with the grinder. The wrench only fits for flat attachments, the concrete grinders are cupped, so you can’t get the 2 prongs into the holes in the first place, at best you can get em in half way and soon as you apply torque, you know it didn’t do much. That’s why he made this video.
Once you lock it, use a screwdriver through the holes for leverage. Rotate it counter clockwise. It’s hard but it works better than beating up the tools. 👍🏼😃
57:18 I don't think tables (arrays) are going away any time soon. It's true we don't have spinning disks anymore, but it still is much more efficient to read data that is contiguously laid out. Also, even though we'll have more memory in the future we'll still need to serialize our data. And lastly, computers aren't getting that much faster anymore. All capacities are still finite, and the idea that we don't need to care will (and has) lead to poor performance, and as such, poor software quality. In the end, programming is engineering, and engineering is about the physical reality. I don't think trying to 'escape the hardware' as an underlying principle and goal is a wise way forward. Abstractions aren't like math, because all abstractions are imperfect and each one comes with a complicated price tag. I absolutely agree with Bob on the point he makes about not "trusting" frameworks. The technical relationship is the wrong way around. Most websites have somehow missed this point, but then again web development is very broken.
At 20:05, Bob explains C had perfect encapsulation, and explains why C++ does not. He says, in C++, since the new operator needs to know the size of a class's object, it's definition therefore must be in a header file, hence losing encapsulation. My question is: Even in C, wouldn't you need to know the size of the structure you want to malloc?
That's a good question! I think he means the paradigm encouraged by C++, instead of what you can do with C++. In C, you'd often have a function that would do the malloc for you, and you'd be responsible for calling the corresponding clean up function once you were done. As long as you'd be operating with a pointer to the struct and pass that to the functions in the header, the compiler would allow you to do that. You can do this in C++ too, but I believe the point Bob is making is about going the C++ way, i.e. using classes and 'new'.
Ha. Yes. I came here specifically hoping for I. and D. since in the previous talked I just watched, he only got through S.O.L. Someone should try to book him for a D.I.L.O.S. talk.
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