August 2014
2014-08-13: Moderators can move comments to chat.
2014-08-12: 8-hour delay on self-answers eliminated entirely.
July 2014
2014-07-25: Comment threads show a choice between revealing all comments and directly adding a comment. The latter implies the former yet allows users to a...
@JerryCoffin the truth is that I am not sure human race will succeed in it, more population will ensure a fight for resources. resource will be wasted in wars, human nature ensure forces are not aligned in developing technologies benefit human races because each individual want hog more of it. So more effort will be devoted to making a bigger piece of pie instead of making bigger pie
I unsubscribed, with the reason "I never subscribed to this mailing list".
> I am writing to you today since I see strong synergy in what our companies do, and would like to explore how we can complement each other on our strategies and mission. Truth be told, any digital publishing service provider would love to work with you!
@chmod711telkitty We might not--but if we fail, I'd suggest that it's not for the reasons you're suggesting. Paradoxically, as population has grown fighting over resources has become less common rather than more so.
> We understand your objective is to combine excellent, engaging, content with the best digital technologies to enhance the joy of reading, and thereby achieve the best possible outcomes for both authors and consumers. We’ve helped several of our clients seamlessly transition to the digital age, and we now typically deliver more ebooks than printer PDFs to them!
I have a base Core.h file and many other .cpp and .h files, lets say - (a.cpp, a.h, b.cpp, b.h, c.cpp, c.h)
Now, I have included Core.h file in all .h files (i.e. a.h, b.h and c.h) . And in c.cpp, I am including a.h and b.h file. As a result Core.h file is getting included two times and I am get...
@thecoshman I stopped caring about that when people wanted me to stop caring about Telkitty - so I have her plonked ever since and leave it to other people to bin her stuff.
@thecoshman I have people plonked and I don't look to see that messages from them need binning. You're not obliged to be the Lounge's trash man just because you're an owner
@chmod711telkitty On an astronomical time scale, we've actually progressed very quickly. The earth is ~4.5 billion years old. It has craters from roughly 5 rocks large enough to wipe out civilization. That works out to one such hit roughly every 900 million years. We've progressed from living in caves to traveling as far as the moon in around 10,000 years, or about
a gazillionth of a percent of the period between the times earth gets hit with big rocks.
@JerryCoffin I saw something about how it took like 10000 generations to invent fire, 1000 to invent writing, 100 computers etc. not sure on numbers...
@StackedCrooked You do that. And you do have a little bit of a point: it's entirely possible that the next rock could be in-bound already, and will hit us within the next couple of years. We don't know enough to say otherwise. Conversely, it could easily be a million years from now--we don't know enough to rule that out either. IMO, there are a lot more serious problems to consider.
Minor edits aren't that bad, and I see waaaay too many edits rejected on the ridiculous basis of "minorness". I'm sorry to see that you're going to make that worse. — Lightness Races in Orbit1 min ago
If your new computer users don't know what a "right mouse button" is, hiding that terminology from them and replacing it with a cutesie graphic is only going to prolong the problem. Dumbing things down never helps in the long run. — Lightness Races in Orbit27 secs ago
@chmod711telkitty Because it was important to them to do what they did at the time. And despite their horrible destructive capability, keep in mind that atomic bombs have (beyond any reasonable doubt) on balance saved a tremendous number of lives.
@StackedCrooked Yes and no. The invention involved in building nuclear bombs wasn't all that difficult. The difficulty was primarily in doing it (specifically, in purifying enough U-235 from U-238 to build a bomb).
@MartinJames Ah, sorry--didn't catch that distinction. In any case, it's definitely true that a nuclear reactor had been running for a few years before the first nuclear bombs were built.
@chmod711telkitty The war had started years before. If you ever want to become even a mediocre troll (not to mention an "elite troll") you'll need a much better grasp of facts and reality to do so.
@JerryCoffin ok, fine. It might have ended the last war quickly & so far so good. But consider we are less than 80 years from the last world war and nuclear bombs have advanced so drastically (much quicker than the advance in rocket technology IMHO), I could not but wonder when and how the next world war will turn out to be ...
Not just the next one, but whether there will be significant net advance after the war
@StackedCrooked They could, but for nuclear weapons to act as a deterrent, there has to be a credible threat that one side might actually use them. I don't believe any country that had nuclear weapons has ever had a civil war (though I don't think that was from the nuclear weapons acting as a deterrent either).
@JerryCoffin the truth is that I am not sure human race will succeed in it, more population will ensure a fight for resources. resource will be wasted in wars, human nature ensure forces are not aligned in developing technologies benefit human races because each individual want hog more of it. So more effort will be devoted to making a bigger piece of pie instead of making bigger pie
@chmod711telkitty Essentially all advances in rockets have happened since the invention of nuclear weapons. Nuclear devices themselves had advanced relatively little. Ultimately, however, "rockets" are a red herring--to support mass-scale emigration from earth, we almost certainly need something other than rockets. Work on alternative propulsion systems is underway.
In a way, it's unfortunate that there has been no 'small-scale', (!), thermonuclear war. The effects of such weapons cannot be imagined and appear speculative to many. That is a very dangerous POV.
> You've reached this channel because the channel you tried to enter has been configured with join throttling (+J). There may be a clonebot attack in progress there, or simply unusually heavy interest. Please leave this channel and try again. Your channel may also be "identified-only" (+r); join #please_register for more information. If you need help, message a freenode staffer or email support@freenode.net .... Thanks!
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Apparently now it's running 24 instances of a cleanup process. There is supposed to be only one running. Nowhere in my code I start this process. It's started once at boot time.
How can there suddenly be 24 instances of this process?
* [Jefffrey] (~textual@host103-253-dynamic.24-79-r.retail.telecomitalia.it): Textual User * [Jefffrey] asimov.freenode.net :TX, USA * [Jefffrey] End of WHOIS list.
@Ell I think you've mistaken my insistence on worldliness for my own nonworldliness
put another way, I know precisely where Massachusetts USA is, but he didn't say Massachusetts USA
he just dropped "Massachusetts" and expected us to mentally append "USA", because if you don't specify the country then it automatically means USA, right?
> obj\Debug\main.o||In function `_static_initialization_and_destruction_0':| c:\mingw\bin\..\lib\gcc\i686-pc-mingw32\4.7.1\..\..\..\..\include\boost\system\error_code.hpp|214|undefined reference to `boost::system::generic_category()'| c:\mingw\bin\..\lib\gcc\i686-pc-mingw32\4.7.1\..\..\..\..\include\boost\system\error_code.hpp|215|undefined reference to `boost::system::generic_category()'| c:\mingw\bin\..\lib\gcc\i686-pc-mingw32\4.7.1\..\..\..\..\include\boost\system\error_code.hpp|216|undefined reference to `boost::system::system_category()'|
Javascript was written in that awkward period of computer science where a bad language could flourish because we didn't know any better. Unfortunately, all periods of computer science are like that.
things like getting npm, bower, an MVC, requirejs or something similar... such a pain to do each time there's a serious project. Maybe I'm just too used to python...
Hello, welcome to the site! You ask bad questions. I recommend you read the entire Help Center and head back when you have a specific, programming-related question. — admdrew19 secs ago
@Abyx Hmm...I find it fairly usable (at least for the specific purposes to which I've wanted to put it, mostly handling conflicts when merging with Git).