Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Does anyone know what technology this logo belongs to? Post 303039049 by verdepollo on Friday 20th of September 2019 11:09:32 PM
Old 09-21-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
No idea...

I think Goggle's reverse image search engine tool has been shutdown?
It is still up but nothing came out. Most of the other vinyl stickers are related to DevOps culture... things like CI/CD, pipelines, cloud, ALM, clusters, etc. I have posted it on different technology forums and nobody seems to have any idea. It does not look like a printing error either. o_O

At this point I think that if I put it on my lid, I can explain to people that it's the logo of my own company and I'm sure they will buy it.
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

The unix.com logo - anyone else seeing this?

Hi All I'm not sure if anyone else notices this or not - however when I view the unix.com forums in Windows, the flash logo at the top of the page absolutely kills my performance - CPU usage rockets to 100%! If you open the task manager and monitor performance, and slowly scroll down so that the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: saabir
1 Replies

2. Solaris

dtlogin logo

hiho, where are the frisky CDE admins.... ;-) how can i change the welcome logo? i found the /usr/dt/config/C/Xresources and the entry: Dtlogin*logo*bitmapFile: but when i enter my own *.bm or *.xpm file the screen use a black logo.... i think i am using the wrong resolution for my picture...... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pressy
3 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

which file belongs to which directory

let I executed the following command: ls -lrt mdase mvfile test | grep '\.xml' the output is : -rw-r--r-- 1 surjya other 0 Sep 23 16:25 sample.xml -rw-r--r-- 1 surjya other 0 Oct 5 16:11 tst2.xml -rw-r--r-- 1 surjya other 0 Oct 5 16:12 test3.xml... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: surjyap
1 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

Cool new logo

I saw this on another board, and burst out laughing. http://www.brandsoftheworld.com/brands/0011/0070/brand.gif Apparently it's a new logo (may even be a new name) for a clothing line. Check them out: www.A-Style.it (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dave Miller
9 Replies

5. Solaris

Daemon belongs to which package..

If i know a daemon and it is running.. How can i know that daemon belongs to which package? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: younus_syed
5 Replies

6. AIX

/home belongs to a user?

While doing a "little" clean up job, i noticed something weird... A ls -altr of my / showed this: drwxr-xr-x 1549 johcham grands 102400 Jan 28 13:13 home How can a user become the owner / modify the group of my /home??? any thoughts? Can i chown this back to bin:bin (i think that... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Stephan
2 Replies
PHILOSOPHY(1)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     PHILOSOPHY(1)

NAME
PDL::Philosophy -- what's behind PDL? DESCRIPTION
This is an attempt to summarize some of the common spirit between pdl developers in order to answer the question "Why PDL"? If you are a PDL developer and I haven't caught your favorite ideas about PDL, please let me know! An often-asked question is: Why not settle for some of the existing systems like Matlab or IDL or GnuPlot or whatever? Major ideas The first tenet of our philosophy is the "free software" idea: software being free has several advantages (less bugs because more people see the code, you can have the source and port it to your own working environment with you, ... and of course, that you don't need to pay anything). The second idea is a pet peeve of many: many languages like matlab are pretty well suited for their specific tasks but for a different application, you need to change to an entirely different tool and regear yourself mentally. Not to speak about doing an application that does two things at once... Because we use Perl, we have the power and ease of perl syntax, regular expressions, hash tables etc at our fingertips at all times. By extending an existing language, we start from a much healthier base than languages like matlab which have grown into existence from a very small functionality at first and expanded little by little, making things look badly planned. We stand by the Perl sayings: "simple things should be simple but complicated things should be possible" and "There is more than one way to do it" (TIMTOWTDI). The third idea is interoperability: we want to be able to use PDL to drive as many tools as possible, we can connect to OpenGL or Mesa for graphics or whatever. There isn't anything out there that's really satisfactory as a tool and can do everything we want easily. And be portable. The fourth idea is related to PDL::PP and is Tuomas's personal favorite: code should only specify as little as possible redundant info. If you find yourself writing very similar-looking code much of the time, all that code could probably be generated by a simple perl script. The PDL C preprocessor takes this to an extreme. Minor goals and purposes We want speed. Optimally, it should ultimately (e.g. with the Perl compiler) be possible to compile PDL::PP subs to C and obtain the top vectorized speeds on supercomputers. Also, we want to be able to calculate things at near top speed from inside perl, by using dataflow to avoid memory allocation and deallocation (the overhead should ultimately be only a little over one indirect function call plus couple of ifs per function in the pipe). We want handy syntax. Want to do something and cannot do it easily? Tell us about it... We want lots of goodies. A good mathematical library etc. AUTHOR
Copyright(C) 1997 Tuomas J. Lukka (lukka@fas.harvard.edu). Redistribution in the same form is allowed but reprinting requires a permission from the author. perl v5.12.1 2009-10-17 PHILOSOPHY(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:43 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy