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If they are trying to detaching them selves from world it dos't mean they are safe or their children's.
They have to teach them well to live among all but not to learn bad things just to do good things...
That's should be the approach.
Now look at the restricted keyword list : “pornography, nudity, gay, lesbian, bisexual, gambling, anti-Islamic content”
but why they did not include Bomb, Terrorist, Rape etc. ?
Life is all about share and care...
public class Life : ICareable,IShareable
{
// implements yours...
}
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So there's a universal concept of Haram all of a sudden?
Where exactly is this going to draw the line?
Indigenous European and Turkish Muslims will eat pork and drink alcohol. There are many British Muslim women who don't wear any kind of Hijab and freely associate with men. One of them even plays a stringed instrument from time to time. I personally know a number of Muslims who earn interest on their savings.
One person's Haram is not the same as another's. Stuff like this delegates free thinking away from yourself.
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Haram is strictly prohibited in Islam.
Below, by sins I'm referring to big ones like Haram (taking interest, eating pork, drinking alcohol, etc).
Some human beings make sins.
Muslims are human beings.
Therefore, some muslims make sins.
So, we should not conclude that: Quote: One person's Haram is not the same as another's.
Previous -> Read "CLR via C#" by Jeffrey Ritcher.
Current -> Exploring WCF thru Apress' "Pro WCF" by Chris Peiris and Dennis Mulder.
Next -> Need to read "The Art of Computer Programming" by Donald E. Knuth.
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I appreciate your point. At the same time the Muslim sinners I personally know don't feel all that guilty about it. I guess it depends on how literally you take your scripture.
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Thanks Jim, I'm gald that you've understand my point.
Quote: At the same time the Muslim sinners I personally know don't feel all that guilty about it.
Then, I'm sorry to say but they are into serious trouble; that's the biggest thing to worry if they are feeling they are not guilty as compared to the guys who feel guilty (because here there is a chance that in some point of time in future they may quit those mistakes/sins once they realize fully and pray to God for forgiveness).
May God let them realize their mistakes and ours too!
Previous -> Read "CLR via C#" by Jeffrey Ritcher.
Current -> Exploring WCF thru Apress' "Pro WCF" by Chris Peiris and Dennis Mulder.
Next -> Need to read "The Art of Computer Programming" by Donald E. Knuth.
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This thread is starting to veer dangerously towards SoapBox territory.
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I very nearly put it into Soapbox territory. If it isn't Soapboxworthy within the next half hour, I'll eat my hat.
Provided I am furnished with a dark,dark chocolate hat.
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Your hat, chocolatey or otherwise, is safe. We have veered.
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Good, now they have no excuse to complain whenever The West does anything they don't like, because they shouldn't be able to see it.
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Dud try with this : 黃色書刊 ( for Porn in http://halalgoogling.com/[^] )
Life is all about share and care...
public class Life : ICareable,IShareable
{
// implements yours...
}
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Please don't. This is the Insider News forum - not the SoapBox.
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Not a good way to search for bacon
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In this tutorial I will guide you through the fundamentals of VB.NET. In fact, the following topics are fundamental to every programming language. You cannot make progress without an understanding of these topics. VB die-hards: here's a tutorial to help spread the love.
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Every developer sets out to make their API perfect when they start writing it, but, at least from this author's experience, it often veers as requirements pour in. The following is a small checklist of things that might indicate you're veering too far. If you're calling KitchenSink(), you may be doing it wrong.
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All modern languages and framework expose a set of buffer-backed data structures. Things like dynamic arrays (aka [Array]Lists) and StringBuilder. They are a useful convinience that comes with a steep price: poor memory characteristics. The way these work is simple: a fixed-length structure (typically an array) which copies itself into a larger fixed-length structure as needed.... The performance characterstics of such structures is the same as the underlying structure for read operations. While a write operation isn't guarnateed to be the same as the underlying structure, more often than not it is. The real problem with these structures is the impact it has on memory. Dear Abby, My buffer overflowed. Should I clean up, or try to ignore it? Sincerely, Bits Everywhere.
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I recently took a vacation the same week as the 4th of July and had lots of time to reflect upon my career to date. It was a little shocking to realize I’ve been writing code for nearly 30 years now! I decided to take advantage of some of the extra time off to author this nostalgic post and explore all of the languages I’ve worked with for the past 30 years. So this is my tribute to 30 years of learning new languages starting with “Hello, World.” Greeting new languages, from TI BASIC to TypeScript and AngularJS.
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The next generation of game consoles is here. This time around, nipping at the heels of the giants (Sony, Microsoft and Nintendo) are the microconsoles: less powerful, cheaper, and more welcoming to indie game developers. The superstar of this new family of game consoles is the Ouya. In this How to Learn guide, we’ll introduce you to the Ouya platform and its capabilities, share links to resources, and present a few suggestions to get you started developing games with it. Unity support is key, but MonoGame looks promising, too.
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I see a lot of headlines these days about "big data" and immediately identify. I think of all the big data problems that I've grappled with over the years and imagine what the key problems with managing big data will be as the data stores get larger and more diverse.... In a sense, I've been working with big data for decades -- cumbersome system logs, sometimes that went on for months, and crazy big logs from big web sites (e.g., the web logs from magazines like SunWorld and JavaWorld back in the late 90's). I might be analyzing tens or hundreds of gigabytes worth of data to answer important questions. The tools that I use won't be much different that those I use to work with files that are tens of kilobytes in size, but the techniques vary considerably. Grepping for needles in haystacks.
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There was no shortage of long-distance diagnoses of the typography in Apple’s recently presented mobile interface, iOS 7. The live-streaming keynote address from the WWDC developer’s conference last Monday hadn’t even started before the first typophiles started sharing their concerns on Twitter. The day before the announcement, our friend Stephen Coles was already deeply worried about the light weight of Helvetica on the display banners hanging at the WWDC venue in San Francisco... Don't get your Bodoni in a bunch... Here's how TextKit improves font handling in iOS.
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In video games, territory often embodies a variety of aspects of meaningful play: storytelling through exploration or experimentation with the environment and the objects contained in it, the tactile or sensual experience of confronting level design, of solving for a goal, of feeling one’s way through to the next area. The territory contains loot, enemies, secrets, keys, NPCs, useless or superfluous junk. The territory is designed to look and feel a certain way, perhaps to elicit a certain emotional response or type of play. Sometimes territories are spatially linear, or nodal, or branching, or confusing and ethereal and broken up.working in each computer window. Further, we directly measured stress using wearable heart rate monitors and found that stress, as measured by heart rate variability, was lower without email. You are standing in an open field west of a white house...
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We report on an empirical study where we cut off email usage for five workdays for 13 information workers in an organization. We employed both quantitative measures such as computer log data and ethnographic methods to compare a baseline condition (normal email usage) with our experimental manipulation (email cutoff). Our results show that without email, people multitasked less and had a longer task focus, as measured by a lower frequency of shifting between windows and a longer duration of time spent
working in each computer window. Further, we directly measured stress using wearable heart rate monitors and found that stress, as measured by heart rate variability, was lower without email. Without email, you'll get more done. Please forward this important information to all your friends.
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I was asked recently by someone looking to possibly get into this field, “what does a normal day look like for you”? It’s a good question. I haven’t ever really thought about in before. I tell friends I sit on a computer all day and write code, but there’s a lot more to it that I just don’t think about usually. So, here’s an average day for me as front-end developer. Coffee, Twitter, Vim, repeat...
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I’m increasingly realizing that many of my gripes about applications these days are triggered by their failure to understand my context in the way that they can and should.... In each of these cases, programmers seemingly have failed to understand that devices have senses, and that consulting those senses is the first step in making the application more intelligent. It’s as if a human, on awaking, blundered down to breakfast without opening his or her eyes! Mobile and sensor-based programming creates new opportunities to innovate.
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Quantum software has finally left the dark ages with the creation of the first practical, high-level programming language for quantum computers. Although today's devices are not ready for most practical applications, the language, called Quipper, could guide the design of these futuristic machines, as well as making them easier to program when they do arrive. Based on Haskell, and can't run on an actual quantum computer. But... progress?
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This post provides this definition and also looks closely at declarative programming as a paradigm: its benefits, its limitations, and how it impacts professional developers. We will also see how declarativeness relates to what is commonly understood as functional programming, and consider ways in which we can reach for declarativeness as a tool in our otherwise imperative code. Independent, stateless and deterministic... and just as likely to annoy you as any other code.
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