From: Gregory Brown on 11 Aug 2010 17:23 On Aug 11, 5:21 pm, Benoit Daloze <erego...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On 11 August 2010 22:35, Gregory Brown <gregory.t.br...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > Where can we find these #COBOTS ? :) I searched on twitter to no avail. We should look elsewhere, I suppose. Somewhere ancient. -greg
From: Alex Stahl on 11 Aug 2010 17:29 Sounds like an IRC channel. On Wed, 2010-08-11 at 16:25 -0500, Gregory Brown wrote: > On Aug 11, 5:21 pm, Benoit Daloze <erego...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > On 11 August 2010 22:35, Gregory Brown <gregory.t.br...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > Where can we find these #COBOTS ? :) > > I searched on twitter to no avail. We should look elsewhere, I > suppose. Somewhere ancient. > > -greg >
From: Gregory Brown on 11 Aug 2010 17:56 On Aug 11, 5:29 pm, Alex Stahl <ast...(a)hi5.com> wrote: > Sounds like an IRC channel. Interesting thought! I dare not venture into their world myself. Can someone investigate and report back? -greg
From: Joel VanderWerf on 11 Aug 2010 17:51 Gregory Brown wrote: > The evil #COBOTS have taken over the programming world and aim to rule > it with an iron fist. COllaborative roBOTS ??? [http://lims.mech.northwestern.edu/]
From: Gregory Brown on 11 Aug 2010 18:15
On Aug 11, 5:51 pm, Joel VanderWerf <joelvanderw...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > Gregory Brown wrote: > > The evil #COBOTS have taken over the programming world and aim to rule > > it with an iron fist. > > COllaborative roBOTS ??? > [http://lims.mech.northwestern.edu/] Sadly, I doubt that these robots are collaborative. They are COBOL Robots. Pair programming was not popular in the past, so I doubt it will be in the future. |