> I’m with NPR’s All Things Considered. I see that you tweeted about buying one of the Atari games uncovered at the dump, and my colleague is working on finding people who’ve bought them. Would you be interested in talking about it?
saweeet
thats the email I got
heh any chance to talk about games/game collecting is awesome
Something about JS : if I use files locally : d:/temp/index.html that calls myscript.js (in the same folder). Can the JS script open/write a file in the same directory (ex: d:/temp/serializeddata.txt ) ?
I googled and found various things. It seems the answer is no. Is it right ?
yeah, there's CS-134 or whatever it is. How much? Given a need, nuclear scientists could build a device you could put in your pocket that would detect a single emission in a volume of water the size of...well, your pocket. Detectability is an irrelevance
there is the potential of global impact, and we have no reason to think we can contain it at this point (11 billion spent, we're no closer to the cleanup)
A banana equivalent dose (abbreviated BED) is an informal expression of ionising radiation exposure, intended as a general educational example to indicate the potential dose due to naturally occurring radioactive isotopes by eating one average sized banana. However, in practice this dose is not cumulative as the principal radioactive component is excreted to maintain metabolic equilibrium. The BED is only an indicative concept meant to show the existence of very low levels of natural radioactivity within a natural food, and is not a formally adopted dose quantity.
For example, the radiation exposure...
> A person living 10 miles from the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor received 700 BED of exposure to radiation, the equivalent of eating two bananas each day for a year.
Doing radioactivity tests against human subjects is inherently unethical (obviously) - so the major data points on radioactivity are Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Chernobyl. Three Mile Island doesn't register
there's a big mysterious zone at the low end where different circumstantial exposures have wildly different results. Ingesting radioisotopes vs. being exposed to actual emissions externally probably makes a difference
I am using sass to generate a source map which is output to a file. Then I generate a sourcemap for another CSS file using PostCSS. I am trying to concat both sourcemaps using applySourceMap in this sourcemap node module but it does work https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/blob/master/lib/sourc...
@SterlingArcher I already did of course. My service already runs with server language (PHP) + database. But I wanted to know if there is lighter solution, just for testing purpose
As far as I know, client side JS simply has not the access to write/read files on your computer. Remotely, locally, etc. You need to do it with a server language. You can store it in localStorage but that's not permanent
@SterlingArcher it does, but you have a VERY limited api for it and I'm not sure it is exposed outside of the extension platform (except IE, IE execCommand)
Ok so if I sum up about this, the general answer is "Not possible", except by using localStorage or browsers extensions? Let me explain why I wanted to do that :
Facebook even warns users in the console that they should ignore any tutorials stating that a few commands in the console allows them to hack someone else's account.
Now bigpicture.bi/demo runs (I have some users thanks to some people sharing it) but I wanted to host a "toy version" on GitHub, that wouldn't require a database or PHP... I wanted to do a simple version that just can read/save easily
This is the reason why I was looking for easy simple reading/writing in a .txt file in the same dir of the .HTML and .JS file
@rlemon for my purpose (ie just providing a toy version of my bigpicture website), what do you think about the localStorage solution ? (that would allow to test Save/Read)
@rlemon I don't know. What's the best solution for making the website opensource in your opinion ? Put the whole thing on GitHub (including the database management, etc.)
> No decoded fragid: If there is an a element in the DOM that has a name attribute whose value is exactly equal to fragid (not decoded fragid), then the first such element in tree order is the indicated part of the document; stop the algorithm here.
@FlorianMargaine Drupal yes, but I think one can easily find a github project for which people don't contribute because it's too long to install a DB for trying it
@FlorianMargaine Hum... I agree 50% but not 100%. Personnaly, I wouldn't try to locally test github.com/Ralt/pastie because I wouldn't want (I'm not experienced enough) to have to install/ set up postgresql server, etc. ... But I don't think your "pastie" tool sucks... It looks cool!
To work around QA not wanting to use commandline tools, one of our services has a /swift/upload endpoint that takes a file from (the load-balanced node's) fs and pushes it to swift/s3.
Figger that out.
In other news, does anyone know of a good swift upload package for node?
@FlorianMargaine Of course we have the potential. But we do whatever we want to do. If we want to do something together, it has to be something that appeals to everyone