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I'd guess 5R is Five Rings Capital, not Rentech.


There's also scsh, which uses Scheme:

http://www.scsh.net/


Unfortunately, on FreeBSD:

    ===>  scsh-0.6.7 is marked as broken: fails to install on amd64.
And I really wanted to play with it. Seems like I will have to help in Scsh reimplementation in Racket before I can do this.


It's not much of an interactive shell, although it's perfectly cromulent for writing shell scripts.


Supposedly, the Reddit admins banned it also because of threats of violence.

http://i.imgur.com/o7CrW3y.jpg


The title sounds like it's saying that the consensus is cooling, not that there's a consensus that the planet is cooling.


Note that this was published in the Economist, which has a reputation for overusing puns. This edition also has articles titled "T Time" and [amyloid] "Beta testing" .


It's wrong either way.


vannevar, could you take a moment to explain why you are so intent on understanding this article as an attack on science instead of what it really is (namely, an attack on politics)?


Because the article's premise is based on the author's skewed interpretation of the science. Ironically, if you look at the article they site for the claim that warming has slowed[1], you'll see that the rate of warming is still within the margin of error for the estimates. If anything, it should reinforce our confidence in the models that the actual curve matches so well with the prediction. And that's just surface temperature, ignoring ocean temperature and the simple fact that during this supposed 'hiatus' there has been a massive net ice melt[2].

1. http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/2157446...

2. http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v482/n7386/full/nature1...


so there is still a consensus on how much it's going to heat up?


As much as there ever was, yes. Look at the range of estimates in the chart your article cites. There's never been a consensus on the actual number, only that it's going to be significant. And so far, that consensus has been correct, as the chart shows.


so a consensus of the models predicted that warming was going to nearly plateau?


No, it's not wrong. You are reading it at its simplest level. Further, you have 3 replies saying the exact same thing. The quantity of saying something by the same person does not increase its quality.

As of right now, you have 30% of the comments in this submission. It really seems like you have a strange bias here to argue over something so trivial.


exactly; it's a play on words


There's Conkeror, which uses JavaScript: http://conkeror.org/


I think it expects you to combine the addition and multiplication, like this:

    (/ (+ 5 4 (- 2 (- 3 (+ 6 (/ 4 5))))) (* 3 (- 6 2) (- 2 7)))


The OCaml debugger also has time travel (http://caml.inria.fr/pub/docs/manual-ocaml-4.00/manual030.ht...).



Yes, but the plan9 text editor/shell/IDE is called Acme: http://doc.cat-v.org/plan_9/4th_edition/papers/acme/


yes, but the shell isnt responsible for the terminal or the editing capabilities on the rio windows. unlike unix, plan9 has no ttys or cursor addressing or no ansi graphics.

everything is just (UTF-8) text.

the window system and acme allow you to edit whats on the screen. and theres a mechanism called the plumber that lets you execute various action depending on selected text.

see:

http://plan9.bell-labs.com/sys/doc/plumb.html

and

http://doc.cat-v.org/plan_9/3rd_edition/rio/


It seems like the GP is saying that based partly on Harvard's reputation, not just the incident itself.



Which, given the lack of CLI invocation of the browser by virtually anyone (I freaking live in bash and I still launch my browser via a window manager icon) makes me think it's highly underutilized.

Mostly, Firefox profiles mean I can't reliably generically script actions on my Firefox configuration (given there's some arbitrary random string involved).


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