Bored now.
Willow, The Wish and Dopplegangland
C isn't that hard:
void (*(*f[])())()defines f as an array of unspecified size, of pointers to functions that return pointers to functions that return void.
| AES 3530 | Aerodynamics |
| CMS 4060 | Advanced Database Management Systems |
| CMS 2010 | Computer Applications for Business |
| CMS 3060 | Database Management Systems |
| CMS 2110 | Business Problem Solving |
| CMS 1010 | Intro to Computers/Microsoft Office 200 |
| CMS 3190 | Business Applications and Web Development with Java |
| CMS 3130 | Business Applications with C and UNIX |
| CSS 1607 | Intro to Java |
| CSS 3607 | Internet Programming: Advanced Java & Perl |
| CSS 2257 | C++ Notes, handouts and assignments |
| CSS 1427 aks CSS 190C | UNIX |
| CMS 390H | Webmaster |
| CSI 1080 Section 5 | Spring 1998 World Wide Web, the Internet & Beyond |
| MTH 151 | FORTRAN Notes, handouts and assignments |
| AES 1760 | Flight Training II - taking, not teaching |
rm -rf /bin/laden
"1. Obviously the authors of the Constitution did not have computer programs in mind when they drafted the patent and copyright clause. The courts, however, have always interpreted the clause to broadly incorporate new technology. In Reiss v National Quotation Bureau, 276 Fed 717 (DSNY 1921), the distinguished Judge Learned Hand held that
the Constitution's grants of power to Congress comprise, not only what was then known, but what the ingenuity of men should devise thereafter. "
"Consequently, I do not believe that any federal agencies, including Congress and this (Supreme) Court, have power or authority to subordinate speech and press to what they think are 'more important interests.'"
Justice Hugo Black, Smith v. California 361 U.S. 147 (1959)
So take *THAT*, RIAA!