This really doesn't make any fucking sense. It threw an uncatchable and untrackable DOM exception when the worker terminated...because the worker deleted the DOMException property. Now it throws a nice uncaught exception: NS_ERROR_FAILURE: Failure
I was working with a client recently on a project that could make full use of ECMAScript 5 when I came across an interesting problem. The issue stemmed from the use of mixins, a very common pattern in JavaScript where one object is assigned properties (including methods) from another. Most mixin functions look something like [...]
its a nice interface which is just keeping all the trouble and blood away from you, but yet you can dig into the bloodiest nightmare of unix, if you wish
Hate Apple for business practices.... Hate iPhones because they suck.... Love iPods because they are the best personal music devices out there.... Hate OSX because I am not a fan at all of their UX. Hate iMacs because they substitute proper design for a sleek form factor... then the thing over heats and crashes
@jAndy D3 for < 3 hours on high settings over heated and crashed the machine time after time
looked it up on the Apple support forums or w/e and it's "known" that games that require high processing for graphics may over heat and crash the machine..
Just doing a java project for university... to be honest, I can somewhat understand why so many people dump their crap on SO in a plz-send-me-the-codez style...
@Neil Celsius only "makes sense" because it is temperatures we care about. 0 (freezing point of water) and 100 (boiling point) are easy to understand and relate too.. Kelvin on the other hand is the true representation of the temperature on a scale that makes sense globally and to every species (assuming there are intelligent aliens)
I agree kelvin is the closest scale on reality and makes therefore a lot of sense, but as somebody stated, we could also define any scale and .. if get used to it, it makes sense
kelvin is just the core, describing reality and the lowest possible temperature and celcius is defined more on reason
Celsius is smart only because it is relational to something universal like water. Kelvin is the best because it accurately represents temperature, and not a reflection on how temperature affects our lives.
Metric is smart because it is a scale that follows simple rules and progresses by powers of ten. Unlike Imperial systems which are representations of things that remind us of measurements (foot for example).
not even kelvin is really so great, since the "lowest possible temperatur" is not fixed. Its variable and will fall over the next million / billion years
how we perceive matter will... and if the universe never stops expanding or doesn't start slowing down matter will eventually get to the point where it is expanding faster than light.
based on the assumption that it will exist where the trend says it will.
if we are a slight few points off then it is there and Kelvin assumed wrong :P but until we know what absolute zero really is, we have to take his word on it :P
Quantum Physics teacher on first day of class: "There is no point arguing with me, this stuff will pretty much go against everything we taught you up till now.... it is a damn shame"
so if zero temperature describes zero movement, this will be toughe to accomplish (ignoring the fact that we most certainly never will be able to measure)
@jAndy yes but the rules are so different (and we don't FULLY understand it yet, so defining rules and extrapolating differences is just a guess at this point)
heat === excited molecules... slow down the molecules and the heat is reduced... stop the molecules and you cannot "remove" any more heat - i.e. absolute zero