@VermillionAZ "By default, threads including their subthreads are sorted according to the value of gnus-thread-sort-functions. By customizing gnus-subthread-sort-functions you can define a custom sorting order for subthreads. This allows for example to sort threads from high score to low score in the summary buffer, but to have subthreads still sorted chronologically from old to new without taking their score into account."
@johnathon So it's sorting threads. There doesn't seem to exist a unique algorithm which is called "thread sort" like merge sort or heap sort or radix sort
but I don't see any reason to conclude that they will be any greater than any other military action there by basically every other military force in the area
oh yeah, I'm sure that Russia, the US, UK, Syrian government, Syrian moderate resistance, and a bunch of other people didn't just spend the last five years doing exactly that
seems rather biased to just lump it on the French right now
you're criticizing the French for an action, but it's hardly remotely specific to the French and they're way better than basically everybody else involved
any real government is empowered by the people it serves. The problem isn't a lack of government, it's just that so many of the people are deeply divided on the issue, and that's why IS is so big and powerful really.
but perhaps not drastic. the reality is that if IS is left to do it's own bidding that would be worse than any amount of civilians that are harmed by military interventions.
@набиячлэвэли so I will consider that android OS will start the service on its own.....I would also want to know who creates camera HAL? as I dont see any fork or pthread_create function being called in HAL. ALthough I see that there is a new function being called by camera factory which means camera object will be initialised but does it mean HAL process also gets created?
I was trying to optimize a piece of code. To my surprise it was far slower than the original (except sometimes). I threw two __builtin_unreachable in, and suddenly it got consistently faster than the original.
@Borgleader Have your example: without the CPPSORT_ASSUME (which is just a thin wrapper around __builtin_unreachable), the algorithms using half_inplace_merge were dramatically slower than before when I added the selected loop.
The code is sometimes literally twice as slow if I remove the assumptions.
@johnathon Functions, limits, derivatives, definite and indefinite integrals, and derivatives of implicit equations for this course. A lot of the professors here are researchers and generally don't have skill at lecturing, which I suppose has its perks. I never understood the point of banning calculation tools when mathematicians have historically relied on them in the form of precalculated tables and reference books.
But a fair argument could be made that banning reference material and tools prevents grade inflation, and that university isn't teaching per se, but a means of gatekeeping for the professional and academic worlds
@Aaron3468 I rarely find a need for anything beyond what engineering calculus textbooks contain. I'm also not a research mathematician.
@Aaron3468 perhaps their refusal to allow you to use reference material is an attempt at which to obtain a truly fair grade, to test you on the knowledge and skill that you possess and not on how well you know how to use your reference material.
@johnathon It's a fair argument, but the point of grading is evaluation (generally to assess eligibility for advancements). While the grade may be more fair without reference material, it doesn't change that grades are proxy measurements and not equivalent to knowledge or skill.
Government gives trillions to companies to stimulate employement. Companies give everything to shareholders. Employement isn't stimulated. Government cuts jobs in public services because they gave trillions to big companies. Yay.
@Aaron3468 Evaluation yes, but what is being evaluated? Always keep in mind that your test scores not only reflect how you are as a student, but also how good of a teacher you have.
Anyway, we don't even need more employement. Seriously, we didn't mechanise everything create more jobs, but to make annoying jobs disappear. What we need is a better way to share the acquired resources.
@Morwenn when we had our last bubble here in the USA GM borrowed a lot of money from the US government to bail them out of bankruptcy. GM paid back every red cent too.
@Morwenn perhaps that's what your government had wished had happend
@johnathon Nope, the plans was to give money to small companies with the hope that they would employ more. In the end, almost all the money went to big companies, then ended in the pocket of their shareholders.
It's more like the whole thing was more or less handled by an organism mostly composed of big companies' directors (which also happen to be among the main shareholders of their own companies).
@Morwenn I can't recall ever dealing with them myself, but I've certainly worked in that industry. Their primary customers is the aerospace industry right? Perhaps this is actually something legitimate it just doesn't seem legitimate because of the industry. There's a lot of companies that seem 'big' that really aren't in the areospace industry.
@Morwenn Being an RF connector manufacturer perhaps it's difficult to find people to employ. Be honnest, how many of your friends is going to college to be an RF Engineer?
@Morwenn I'm far from an expert on french law, the most dealings with it I've had is contracts i had to sign when working with Renault. But it seems to me that fraud is fraud, and if they would arrest a trader for fraud, they would arrest anyone for fraud.
@johnathon Just look at our politicians: knee-deep into financial fraud and still trying to run for president. How could they blame other people? Haha.
When you've got enough money, you can buy plenty of lawyers and time.
they are buying time. There will come a day when they can't. And they'll go away. New politicians will take their place, and the cycle will repeat. Try not to knock it too bad, it's better than war any day.
Anyway, all in all I still feel that trying to create more employement for the sake of it is useless. We strived to remove annoying jobs and succeeded. Now we should find ways to share these resources as needed among everyone.
every developed country is close to 'getting worse by the year' or they are already there. There's not a lot of room in between the two anymore. Britain left the EU. That should tell you how fed up your neighbors are getting as well. Truthfully it's probably a little better here in the states, but i'd be willing to wager that the US figures would be better because their inflated somewhat.
@johnathon The US is even worse than Britain- they never would have joined the EU in the first place due to how ridiculously backwards they are, and Trump is a Presidential candidate.
@Puppy For the record in the land of the lounge and everywhere else in my life I'm not a Trump supporter. I'm not a Hillary supporter. And puppy i'd trade politicians with you this election cycle for sure.
@Mikhail Ha! I voted. There was an election place open for early voting 1 block from my apartment building. They didn't need an Illinois ID. Just a government ID and a proof of residency.
user1804599
Also, not really bugs, but if our universe was a simulation, it would have distance culling optimizations (for example, finite speed of propagation of light) and lazy evaluation at the microscopic level (for example, a particle would be in an indecisive state until observed). Thank goodness we don't have that kind of nonsense. — T. C.Oct 26 '14 at 21:37
in some ways we'd be better with trump over clinton, in some ways we'd be better off with clinton over trump. There's just not enough GOOD in either camp at this point for me to endorse either.
@Morwenn we had someone running for president here that was socialist. We actually had people supporting him.
Well, last time i checked the usa was a republic. Not a socialist government. That's the case in how you vote. However if you read all the federal laws and things people can apply for .... you'll quickly think your living in a secretly socialist government. When I did my taxes i felt like i was living in a socialist government for sure.
@johnathon I this case, I think Trump is actually preferable--not because his ideas are better, but simply because he's enough less experienced at politics that he's unlikely to get as many of his terrible ideas enacted into practice.
@johnathon That's certainly a valid concern. I basically have the same concern about both of them, and while Hillary's policies might be less bad (at least on average) I think she's a lot better at playing the game--to the point that she's likely to do more harm overall.
Sadly, I think at this point our only hope is to limit the damage that'll be done.
@johnathon Do you mean there are times you think he should be allowed out of the straitjacket, or that there are times you simply manage not to think about him at all?
LOL @billyjoel's hilarious jabs during his live recordings http://open.spotify.com/track/2rYVOQQUzRXd9QIcQXwcDZ (to audience:) "I like that chord" (repeats dissonant 3x)
@JerryCoffin I mean there's times that the things that come out of his mouth invoke the feeling that im listening to a 15 year old complain about a girl trying to ruin his reputation.
@JerryCoffin and times that I think he really is delusional.
@sehe Well, something happened and lights went out but sockets stayed powered. People called the utilities company and after about 30 minutes they fixed it. But they had to, apparently, reset the whole power so my sockets went out for 5 seconds and my PC did reset.
@sehe That guy just keeps posting black metal tracks with awesome landscapes. Actually, atmospheric black metal groups on social networks post two kind of things: atmospheric black metal tracks, and pictures of landscapes with trees and/or snow.
> a subgenre of black metal which relies on heavy incorporation of atmospheric, sometimes dreamy textures, therefore moving into a less aggressive direction. It often features synthesizers or classical instrumentation, typically for melody or ethereal "shimmering" over the wall of sound provided by the guitars. The music is usually slow to mid paced, and generally features slowly developing, sometimes repetitive melodies and riffs, which separate it from other black metal styles.
@Aaron3468 the fact that I listen to metal is enough. I do live in the state that 'invented' country music .... though i steeply belive that was Ireland but who's counting right?
@Aaron3468 funny fact, my father was a country music muscian back in the 70's
@Aaron3468 He tried to teach me to play the guitar, that turned into me teching him new things on the guitar. lol
Personally I'm not much into the idea of 'invention' because it often turns out that the ideas had been permeating society prior to any specific incident. Scientific breakthroughs are often the only situations that can be traced to particular projects with relative certainty, and even then are not always correct.
@Aaron3468 I had formal music training in school, i played the saxophone and applied the same theory to the guitar. Major scales to 1-3-5 major cords, 1-3rd flat -5 minor chords, the 145 and a 135 progressions, 1375 progressions etc
@Aaron3468 minor pentatonics to minor harmonics etc
@Aaron3468 i never played 'professionally' in a recording studio or anything like t hat
@Aaron3468 so i was exposed to a multitude of generes
@Aaron3468 classical, blues, rock, country, folk, metal, pop, etc