@Callum [DMCA](http://dmca.urbanup.com/172435) The Digital Millennium Copyright Act; The law that Corporate America uses to stifle innovation and competition; the result of the RIAA's and MPAA's lobbying powers; the end of Fair Use laws.
> No matter how you look at it, it's not possible to watch a CSS restricted DVD using only free software without committing some sort of crime. OP is just being unnecessarily pedantic, but it's worth having this discussion.
> DMCA 1201(a)(1)(A)? "No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title. The prohibition contained in the preceding sentence shall take effect at the end of the 2-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this chapter."
My cider is still bubbling along; very happy that it decided to work, but now I have like 6 extra packets of yeast sitting around, waiting until this current brew is done
> Yeah, jQuery is dead not because frameworks make you write better code - we know they don’t - but because your framework does DOM manipulation better than you ever could.
@Callum good explanation
but I hate how he uses framework and lists react in the beginning lol
@rlemon you said to add corn sugar along with other sugar so that my cider is both carbonated and sweet, but isn't corn sugar fermentable? Won't I get too many bubbles and my bottles will explode?
Steam just trolled me. I wanted to log in via desktop after a reboot, they showed my username in lowercase. Didn't think much of it. No password of mine worked. Went mad. Killed people. Had to tell my family. Heartwrenching. Then I figured it out and typed my correct username. And there was much rejoicing.
Angular services are silly, Angular controllers aren't proper controllers... the only thing Angular does right is the Directives, but might as well just use React at that point
@Loktar I'll let you know when it gets on github... the Shadow Dom polyfill is kinda shite, because there's only so much you can do in javascript, but it does at least follow the spec
react can't just let you register your polymer components?
actually, that would be kind of clever: a library that lets you register element types/backends, so you can switch between DOM and caching DOM and custom element handlers
the whole add/remove/replace thing is just a few events
you would have to explicitly add your custom component... but it would still be weird because react needs to handle the rendering and has no concept of the shadow dom where your code/styles for the element would be located
idk its an interesting thing to think about, would be fantastic if it were possible
I think real web components are the right way to go and all these frameworks/libraries are just providing stop gaps.
@Loktar No, I'm going to weigh against that. The beauty of React isn't just the similarity to web components: It's the core concept of ui = render(data)
Instead of taking a powerful thing (= js), a less powerful thing (=markup), and giving you the power of implementing the less powerful thing in the powerful thing. If you catch my drift, wink wink
I have never run into problems with the stack forcing templates to be simple and not contain any kind of logic. the only issue has been how it makes events less direct.
If you just have functions and objects, you can send objects over the wire. Or save them to disk. Or do whatever you want. You just have to make sure there're functions on the other side.
It's quite beautiful, and it's not just about the web
Math.abs(Math.random()*(max-min)+min) returns an integer that is between min(inclusive) and max(exclusive). How do I alter the code to make both integers inclusive?
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/09/04/when-your-colleague-uses-some-random-code-he-found-online/ CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers When your colleague uses some random code he found online CommitStrip 1441387633
It's a great game, just a surprisingly realistic counter-terrorism shooter.
For the first mission, you have to save hostages in an embassy. You spend 20 minutes planning out a mission on a detailed map, setting up waypoints and telling your dudes to flashbang doors, then less than 2 minutes raiding the place, kill 12-15 terrorists, and leave.
If you get shot, you're almost always dead, and the character is dead for the rest of the campaign. Sound and sight work correctly and terrorists will execute the hostages just cause.
I think some agencies used it as a training simulator for a while.