Absolutely! We're also testing out our Javascript RAW image viewer so you can browse your RAW images without any special software, directly on the web, and on any computer.
Spoonrocket looks the closest (CA only for now, I'm in NYC), so thanks for that. I'll keep watching them. I couldn't find a subscription option for Sprig; the others mentioned upthread were "ingredients only" services. Looks like this model is getting closer, though.
I think that a company like Spoonrocket experimenting with a subscription service would be worth trying - the companies would have steadier income, and customers wouldn't have to think about it unless they didn't want the daily meal.
If you're not familiar, Scott is a professor of MIT, specializing in quantum computing. Many readers of his blog are also well known in this sphere, so they would have more technical insight, more in depth than the pbs layman's version.
>>If you're not familiar, Scott is a professor of MIT
As I said, I don't doubt his ability. Its the presentation I object to. The HN blog leads to some random blog that barely touches on the topic that the headline promises and the core of the story is in a link contained in the blog. By any sane definition that is blog spam, MIT professor or not.
>>Many readers of his blog are also well known
So? Its linked to his blog, not to his readers. I don't care if his readers include Albert Einstein himself. The link did not deliver despite the authors (proven) ability to deliver on the content.
Technically, you can run Shor's algorithm on non quantum computers, with an exponential speed up (but fully within capabilities of modern computing vs. small quantities of qubits)
Besides the Sketchpad, Alan always mentions Grail (GRAphic Input Language), designed by Thomas Ellis and programmed by Gabriel Groner and others at the Rand Corporation. That was from 1964.
Thank you for applying to intern at a YC company. Unfortunately we weren't able to find a position for you this time.
Since it's our first time matching interns with YC companies, we're beta testing the program with just a small number of companies. Based on the high volume of high quality applications (over 1600) we received, we hope to expand this program in the future. We hope you'll apply again.
Rejected again. Unfortunately I don't have the prestige of MIT, Stanford, Harvard, or other top schools to carry my application through.
I don't think school is too important. My friend and I are from the same school, I got to the next round, he didn't. (He's going to go work for Google anyway, so it doesn't matter). That being said, it probably does play _some_ factor.