@CatPlusPlus Yeah, but in this case it would be a game where most of the code is set, and you can only change one or two lines of code that changes entirely how something works..... like getting a turret to shoot another turret instead of yourself.
The rest of the game would be a platformer or something
BTW, hashing passwords in the client is a legit thing, see e.g. SRP. I've also seen a bit less sophisticated challenge-response implementations that didn't involve sending cleartext password to the server, and they worked quite well AFAIK.
Of course, it's not simple SHA1(password) and then send it.
Humm one thing I wounder about is how scientific software (for example for computational fluid mechanics) is validated, besides comparing the results with actual experimental results
Proofing and ensuring that the theoretical models behind them are correct is one thing. But where the heck does the developer ensure that his code is actually correct..
@Xaade yes they are :) However I'm wondering about simulation verification.. as far as I heard when it comes to CFD actual experiments are still used to verify results..
Tying it altogether. What I'm trying to say, is that in many cases, people just don't bother checking that their software model actually matches reality. All they bother proving is that the variables they incorporate exist in reality and that the input data was correctly collected.
Well there are the kind of bugs which only show up in a case which is maybe very unlikely to appear in a small test environment but in a large simulation after days of computing it may appears..
Climatology hasn't bothered going through that formalization process.... or rather it hasn't reached the stage where it can. My frustration is the arrogance of those involved that suggest that they do know for a fact what's going on.
Science needs to just step down from it's high horse and return back to it's humility of the last century. Everything is a model, because we can't incorporate all variables.
The whole reason I'm off on this rant, is because of my experience dealing with a few of the semi-notable scientists who react to questioning their logic as if one committed blasphemy.
I'm pretty sure that Science dictates that if you build a nuclear powerplant and then smack it with a gigantic earthquake, said powerplant might not work correctly
@Nils I read that there was some ethical issues regarding the pipes that carried the water to cool the reactor. That the pipes weren't sound, and it was covered up. Therefore it wasn't the earthquake or the tsunami, but yet again.... human arrogance.
Like Halo 1.... where all of the sudden there's a robot in a facility that becomes an enemy.... when the robot could have blown up the halo at any point.
No No.... I can't actually do it.... I'm programmed to wait for some alien species millions of years in the future to develop enough to travel to this point in space.
Russia and China might be getting happy together, but that's an awful long way from permitting military operations to move through their borders to strike the United States
I don't believe that global conflict like that is genuinely possible in the modern era
the fact is that the world's economy is far more interlinked than it ever was, and I don't believe that it's economically feasible to start wars everywhere
@DeadMG Power is much more difficult to generate yourself. Even in large cities, there's enough space for people to grow quite a bit of food if they need to.
@Xaade Actually, most of the "climate change" is much more favorable toward growing. CO2 (airborne or otherwise) acts a fertilizer, and warmer climate means longer growing seasons. If you look at global maps of warning, you also see that there's a lot of warming at the poles, but relatively little change elsewhere, and in some areas even cooling.
for example, after WW1, then in Germany the conditions were genuinely atrocious, and it's not at all unreasonable that they were very desperate to survive
@Xaade: That's just a recession- it's nowhere near enough to trigger war
@Xaade Yes -- of course, I personally think most people have things a bit backwards. I think a lot of the "mini-iceage" was anthropomorphic, and much of the "global warming" we're now seeing is really a matter of recovering from the global cooling we caused for a century (or so) by burning massive amounts of coal. There's no question that airborne sulphur does cause cooling.
if I'm, let's pretend for a moment, Germany, and I've got a complete bitch of a recession going on here, but my neighbour France is very wealthy, then that might be an incentive
but in actuality, France and Germany are both in pretty equal conditions
what has Germany got to gain by invading France?
everybody has had a recession- there's nothing to be stolen, as it were
the tremendous cost of a war would massively outweigh any resource gains
@DeadMG Even a country that's in horrible shape economically has a lot you can plunder, as long as you don't care about causing all manner of problems in the process. The Vikings (for example) got pretty rich by plundering the Atlantic coast of Europe, despite the fact that most of the people they were plundering really were barely surviving.
@JerryCoffin The way I understand it. CO2 will hit a limit where it can no longer increase temperature. The remainder of the predicted increase is due to feedback effects. Where the science isn't settled is what the net result from the positive and negative feedbacks equal. Where the media and certain arrogant scientists get off is supposing that all the feedbacks end up in an exponential increase. However, I say in all of Earth's history, I can't find evidence of an exponential increase
@DeadMG The difference was that the Vikings were a socialized military movement. They existed by consuming resources that they shared because they had a single minded goal. This is definitely more efficient survival than ownership.
mostly because if Germany decides to invade France, then it'll suddenly find itself cut off from all of it's trading partners by the rest of the European Union
@Xaade Even that's simplifying things quite a bit. For one thing, water vapor does about the same thing as CO2, but much more efficiently, so CO2 has little effect except in places (like the poles) where the air is extremely dry. Over the ocean, for example, where the air's more humid, it has virtually no effect at all.
If resources were scare enough, any country would fall back to a military movement.... which would be more efficient in consumption of resources than an ownership system. So why the capitalist neighbor is suffering because of unbalanced ownership, the invader won't have that problem.
@Xaade Maybe, to at least some extent. At the same time, it is a lot more complex system that most people like to admit. Treating it as a simple "change this, and that's the only possible result" is unrealistic to put it mildly.
if you're Country A, and you're not producing resources, and your neighbour is Country B and he's also not producing resources, who are you gonna pillage?
out of all the countries in the world, some of them have to produce resources, else the pillagers are gonna die, because there's no producers left to pillage
just like predator/prey relationships in the wild
if predators over-hunt their prey- guess what happens? predator populations collapse too
How do you indicate in your code when a C++ function is possible to throw something? I don't mean through documentation, but through syntax.
For example I tried placing a throw(std::exception) at the end of the function declaration, but that gave me a warning saying that "C++ exception specifica...
Had Russia remained allies with Germany, and Japan not attack Pearl Habor.... Germany Russia and Japan would have been far more stronger whenever they faced America.
@DeadMG Maybe -- but wars have shown that it often takes a lot more than one victim before the others learn. In WWII, the US didn't get (officially) involved until Germany had taken over a lot of countries, not just one. Even then, there were quite a few people who thought that we could accommodate them instead of fighting.