First find the folder and do the uninstall. Then you have to reverse the changes to your browser default search and right click search. A look through the registry helps too.
Shor's Factoring Algorithm is very important because it showed that a Quantum Computer will be more efficient than a normal computer when solving some important, practical problems (Factorization is important in the secure transmision of electronic data, like credit card numbers). This video shows briefly how Shor's algorithm can be simulated in Mathematica using the free Quantum add-on. Quantum is available at: http://homepage.cem.itesm.mx/lgomez/quantum/
An interesting documentary. It is chock full of liberal bug a boos! That part is funny. Wikipedia entry.
—- YT video went AWOL
Stiglitz is always an idiot
Why are all the anti capitalist / pro government documentaries narrated by Michael Palin?
It is deceptive to say the video is about "the rise of the machines" – its not. Its about humans and the way they use their tools
why do liberals always resist the idea of self emergent properties?
So let me understand this more. This is all a conservative conspiracy that we can use mathematical models to predict nature. That of course brings to mind the Great Global Warming Swindle. But is not that the religion of the left?
Why is it liberals who contend to believe in evolution are the ones who reject WE are machines? It would seem they would be the ones who would most easily accept the concept.
We ARE machines. The system consisted of machines – us – before computers and after computers. I find it a running theme that liberals do not understand machines. They are fundamentally unable to grasp hard sciences in general. They like the soft sciences where it is hard to put a number on something. That allows them to interpret anything any way they like. It for this reason I prefer the machines over liberals.
Its always the "liberals" who aggitate agains replacing government as it is presently constituted! They always seem to fear free minds
This class is an introduction to the evolutionary analysis of human emotions, how they work, why they exist, and what they communicate. In particular, this lecture discusses three interesting case studies, that of happiness (e.g., smiling), fear and the emotions we feel towards our relatives. Finally, this lecture ends with a brief discussion of babies' emotional responses to their caregivers.