@tereško As I'm sure you're aware our music tastes don't cross very often, but I thoroughly enjoyed that
@tereško afaict macbooks are designed for people who want to stick one specific thing into their computer, I'll leave the rest of that to your imagination /cc @user128268
@DaveRandom believe it or not, people using Apple think that the devices are much simpler, easier and more stylish than the complicated Android phones who are for "nerds"
@ziGi pretty much precisely reiterating my position... they think they are simpler and they are wrong. They are easier for the user but as soon as you need to open the black box you are screwed. And "stylish" is basically the opposite of what I want - I'll take function over form any day. And for the record, I have never felt the urge to dismantle my Android devices, but it's nice to know that if I ever decided to do so I have some hope of putting it back together again afterwards
Anonymous
12:53 AM
@tereško why can't you keep your feelings to yourself, and just be happy.
@DaveRandom but that's because you think from the technical perspective of it and many people are just terrified of technical stuff and will give their phone to be repaired at a service so that's not a factor for them
Fingerprints are often used by law enforcement to identify individuals, even with a partial print. Are there any cases where people had the same fingerprints? Is there a limit to the number of unique fingerprints that can possibly exist?
@tereško I know a girl that printed fake money to keep under her pillow because she thinks that when there are money around, it means you are going to get more money
@samaYo I know that the tongue has a format which is also similar to the fingerprint in terms of rarity
@ziGi Maybe, but I have this nagging feeling that the Apple marketing department is now a massive waste of time. It's almost like marketing oil... "Has the fuel indicator dropped off in your car? Buy some petrol." They've managed to turn themselves into a kind of weird necessity (culturally speaking).
@DaveRandom I remember watching Tim Cook presenting the Apple watch, and I can't seem to remove the image of his smirk from my head when he presented a few stupid features that were already available on wearables for quite some time, and at the end he said something in the lines of 'And most importantly it can show time' and people laughed and applauded.
@samaYo As someone who has in the past spent a lot of time under the influence of certain things that alter (amongst other things) my heart's regulatory systems, I see some fairly sizeable issues with this... :-P
@tereško you should work with my US company and see if we're all that terrible. maybe just an anthropological experiment for you. have a good night (morning)?
@ziGi Weirdly, I actually have less of an issue with the watch that I do with other things, because it's so stupid that it's almost Darwinism... if you're dumb enough to part with that cash, you probably shouldn't have had it in the first place
Anonymous
@DaveRandom under the influence of a girlfriend who broke your heart several times :D
Although @ziGi, last year at phpnw I met @ThW and he had something that was actually pretty cool... a surface with a second screen and a proper keyboard that packed down into something considerably smaller than my laptop, it was actually a useful dev environment that was fully portable. I am prepared to admit that I may have been wrong when I see stuff like that.
it's funny to see how when people buy stuff and give a lot of money for it, they try to convince you and themselves that it's good and it's worth the money they gave, that way they convince other people to buy the same thing and do the same thing, and it spreads like a virus
@DaveRandom do you have the name of that device, I want to check it out
@DaveRandom technically everything is perceived with a delay
because to be able to understand the written words, you first have to read it, which introduces delay between the screen and your eyes, then your eyes and your brain, then your brain has to decode and move that information to your short term memory and your brain will decide whether it has to be transferred to the long term memory or not based on how interesting it is and what emotions it promotes
It was a bog standard surface (as in the MS thing) afair, with another similar sized thing that was just a dumb LCD as the second screen, I'm sure @ThW would be happy to furnish you with the details when he returns (he's in Germany so it's like 4am for him atm)
@ziGi when the first few iPhones were being released, and they were doing the white background commercials that showed the product and the hand with only the voice and a light, clinking melody, it was genius. that was only because the product was so much further along than anything else
but now, the whole "experience" advertising (and, make no mistake, the keynotes are advertising) is just... i don't know... dumbing
Tim Cook: We have this new revolutionary feature which we will present to you today. It will redefine the way you perceive information and attribute it to the more natural human state where background moves in a slower manner than the foreground. I present to you iParalax. The newest most revolutionary feature from Apple allowing you to enjoy Apples crappy products on our crappy website in a much more pleasant innovative crappy way.
@ziGi Relativistic physics, in terms of the pure mathematics at least, allows for the idea that you could theoretically travel backwards in the temporal dimension in the immediate proximity of a body which is massive enough. I personally don't subscribe to this view, but I am also a massive pedant.
^^ this is basically why I don't subscribe to that interpretation. I can't believe that the flow of causality can be altered, a lot of things would break if that were the case
Rather annoyingly though, it is also possible that the reason quantum and relativistic scales don't seem to marry up is because it's not only possible but it's actually happening, and mass leaks into the "wrong place" so the figures don't add up @ziGi
(I've been thinking about this a lot recently, places where math seems to stop working suck)
I don't think there's anything wrong with capitalism, as long as it doesn't hinder progress and it stays inside the moral boundaries and doesn't endanger human lives in the short and long term.
I think about it the following way: Since the group of people who buy those products are investing in a company which does not invest as much in innovation as much in manipulation (that's what I call marketing), the market won't move further. Nonetheless, companies which are competing (like Samsung, Microsoft) there would always be a strive for making something better and that is good because of the competition factor.
However, if they create an oligopolies (monopoly of multiple companies) then things can go really wrong.
My boss bought an iPhone 6 because he thought that the Samsung S5 that I have looks too plastic and it doesn't feel as heavy and stable as the iphone does in his hand. That was his main argument
Also people get scared when they see a lot of functionality which is currently provided on Android phones (especially in the settings menu)
@ziGi So, very quickly, the set of equations that describe how very large things interact with each other (the relativistic theory of gravity) works incredibly well, so well that it's hard to believe it's wrong, in terms of predicting things that we can measure. Quantum theory works similarly well at the very small scales. But when you try and combine the two sets of rules there are unresolvable conflicts.
One of the things that's implied by relativity is "black holes", things that have so much mass that space-time becomes so heavily curved that nothing can escape, and it's theoretically possible that the passage of time is disrupted to such an extent that the "space dimensions" (i.e. matter) could move "backwards" through time.
If this were the case - and this is pure conjecture - then observable mass could entirely disappear at this point and reappear "somewhere else" which is already starting to veer into the idea quantum fluctuations, so maybe the reason the two sets of equations don't marry up experimentally is because some of the mass literally just went somewhere else because it "fell" into a gravity well.
I'll admit this is heavily unscientific conjecture, but it is nevertheless what I have been thinking about, of late (and started trying to crunch some numbers but swiftly running out of understanding).
@DaveRandom but you are right, since time is the 4th dimension so mass can disappear and reappear since it can go back and forth inside the 4th dimension, but note that this is basically a theory. No one know what happens exactly inside black holes because physics just breaks there
There is a theory that actually there can be other universes inside a black hole.
@DaveRandom yeah I can't wrap my mind around it since I think that if the gravity and mass is infinite, how could there be anything that's moving at all inside of it
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public $value = 2;
protected function __construct() {
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public $value = false;
public $á;
public $â;
public $ã;
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@ziGi [A valid variable name starts with a letter or underscore, followed by any number of letters, numbers, or underscores. As a regular expression, it would be expressed thus: '[a-zA-Z_\x7f-\xff][a-zA-Z0-9_\x7f-\xff]*'](php.net/manual/en/language.variables.basics.php)
@ziGi The issue that I have is with the idea that things slip into unobservable dimensions at this point. I'm fine with the idea of there being things we cannot observe, I'm actually fine with the idea of infinity in the sense that there are likely fundamentally unmeasurable things, but the idea that there are imperceptable dimensions troubles me greatly (not least because we presumably have velocity in them?) and seems like a stop-gap for incorrect assumptions
@ircmaxell Out of interest, if I decided to do this, would the lexer be able to cope with it? I'm imagining a scenario where I'd need at least double this amount of RAM as I assume it would copy the name into the sym table rather than reading it directly in?
@DaveRandom 4th dimension is where you have an array of 3rd dimensions, 5th is where you have an array of all possible 4th dimensions (since I think the 4th dimensions array is not infinite, it has a beginning and an end or it might be cyclic producing every single 4th dimension as part of the 5th)
@ziGi The ability to alter it is not a prerequisite for the ability to perceive it. n-dimensional mathematics is interesting and gives some (IMHO) strangely useful results, but it's (again IMHO) nothing more than a stop-gap for a better explanation.
@ziGi That's exactly the point though, that's almost exactly what it is, but I can conceive of all the other layers. It's not veering into the realms of things that are not and will never be observable.
@DaveRandom well the problem is that there are many things that we can't currently measure so mathematics gives us some answers but just to a certain point
That's why people are doing those experiments at the LHC
cause it supplies are with more accurate data to how particles react instead of using just theory
@ziGi No problem with "can't currently", big issue with "will never be able to". The best we will ever be able to do, by definition of being stuck within x-y-z-t, is measure mass/energy deficiencies, and for that is not proof of imperceptible dimensions or any other mega blue-sky stuff, it's just proof that something went somewhere else. Saying that it did it by moving through some other dimension is semi-lazy nonsense. I much prefer the idea that it just moved through t.
@DaveRandom don't be so pessimistic. People thought we would never fly no more than 150 years ago. There are different levels of human civilization according to Kardashev (Kardashev scale) so I guess if we are able to harness the power of galaxies we can generate huge enough gravity to allow us to rip time-space continuum
Of course I don't argue, we are a 3 dimensional beings and we would always be, unless we are able to evolve in such a way to move in time, then we would be a 4 dimentional creatures and the 5th dimention would be our time
the fifth dimension is the expansion of the universe, or ephemeral sense; i.e. knowing someone is behind you when you dont see them, hear them, touch them, smell them... just "feel" them there
class S151 extends S {
public $value = 'T_BOOLEAN_OR';
protected function __construct() {
}
}
class S152 extends S {
public $value = 'T_OR_EQUAL';
protected function __construct() {
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}
class S150 extends S {
public $value = '|';
public $ü;
public $½;
protected function __construct() {
$this->ü = S::_load(S151::class);
$this->½ = S::_load(S152::class);
}
}
I have these registers in mysql (also in postgresql)
Venta
date amount
01/02/2015 7
10/02/2015 8
10/02/2015 9
20/03/2015 4
20/03/2015 11
25/04/2015 1
So, I would like to make a query where I get the total amount per day and if doesn't exists an amount in the day, display the da...
@ircmaxell why do you do these sorts of tests? validating language design decisions? i would think practical concerns are moot at this point; if you really need this sort of certainty for pragmatic stuff, given the expert knowledge you exhibit, you'd just go to C
@ziGi I have issues with this. I accept that manipulating large-scale gravitational effects to move through time is not theoretically impossible, and I even accept that by extension faster-than-light travel (or at least the appearance of it) might be possible - although frankly, you go first - but that is only accomplished by manipulating space and time, not space, time and wtfzomg. in the same way that if I pick up a chair and move it left, up and forwards think I did magic trick.
one of the concepts is that theories follow an arch. Initially they are really simple. They are so simple and orders of magnitude more accurate than the prior theory that they cause a revolution in thinking. Then, over time, errors start building up. And corner case after corner case cause the theory to get more and more complicated. Until the next revolution occurs.
you can travel faster than the speed of light without becoming infinitely massive but you have to be able to bend space which means immense amounts of energy to bend the space behind and in front of you
@ircmaxell that sounds like a reasonable explanation
@bwoebi well we try to model things after the real world and nature which is part of it, so I guess concepts and techniques can be applied in multiple fields of science
@user128268 Not sure how phenomena that are entirely explainable by defined metrics would be dependent on something that cannot currently be defined...
I have a good and a bad news. The bad one is that the universe would stop functioning when it reaches maximum entropy and nothing will be able to exist in it, not even atoms. The good news is, we'll be long gone by then, unless we are able to transfer our minds into a more reproducible and easy to copy drive. I guess making Event Sourcing to keep our memories would be much more of a hassle.
@user128268 since there is a red shift in light from the farthest reaches of the universe that we can see, this is a clear indication of the expansion of space (cause photons loose energy when space stretches)
It's has to do with the Doppler effect (if you remember when a car passes you by and is honking you can hear the sound increasing in pitch and when it passes it decreases in pitch) same thing happens with light
Of course that's quite oversimplified
Additionally to be able to measure it, what they do is they take a volume of space objects that are close to each other and calculate the Hubble volume which gives a ratio between the light deceleration (or speed recession, I am not sure about the proper term) compared to the red shift
@BrianS there are many reasons which ircmaxell explains extremely well in his blog, but in summary you use ready code and you expect the framework to work and the people that write them to be programming Gods that don't make mistakes, but there are many architectural flaws with frameworks that I start discovering with time,
and it's much better if you know all the stages that your request goes through instead of having something that you input some configs into it and expect a controller action on the other end to which you could do your CRUD processes
@ziGi (yes I should have gone to bed) this also bothers me a little. Red shift definitely indicates that things are moving away, but it may be because space has expanded and it may simply be that space as stayed the same and the things are moving away so fast that the emissions themselves are stetched. In the letter case it's (highly theoretically) possible that some of the things we see are actually sort of echoes of much nearer things a long time ago.
As an extreme example maybe something in the deep field image is actually the milky way, but the matter has at some point overtaken the light. I actually don't believe this is the case but it would be... interesting.
@ziGi I think the thing people like you and the smart PHP guys like ircmaxell forget is people like @BrianS may know a lot less than those who wrote the frameworks, so it may benefit them greatly. But I see the argument from both sides
@taco I agree but it's a bit like comparing reading books vs watching the movies. You know it's much easier and more enjoyable watching the movie (Also faster) but at the end you don't develop your brain and the end result is that you forget the movies much faster than books
same with working with a framework and building on your own
@BrianS I recommend you try to understand how the frameworks work
@BrianS it's hard to answer that question. Knowing how to program in PHP is important but it's different than knowing good architecture and project structure