@nwp I didn't like the masculine parts of my body (body hair, losing my hair, slowly evolving shape of the face, etc...), and it happens that getting rid of testosterone solves these problems.
ah mais vouèye mais je vinsse quand même de temps à autre pour vous bénir de mon AUGUSTE présence (cc @Luc) mais de toute façon le chat est bloqué au boulot
Muggers are one of the worst attackers to fight back: in their world, they will get your wallet. Whether you will be bleeding for it or not is your choice.
I was delighted to learn today that 'spell' in English comes from the shortening of Old French 'espeller' which itself comes from Old German 'spell'. git revert as milleniumbug would say.
@CheukKinSing "spell" doesn't seem like Old German.
It'd be "spellon".
> from Proto-Germanic *spellam (source also of Old High German spellon "to tell," Old Norse spjalla, Gothic spillon "to talk, tell"), from PIE *spel- (2) "to say aloud, recite."
If you take away their ability to pick (you as) the victim and the situation, you're already much safer than if you added the ability for you to shoot them in response.
maybe do one of those driving courses where they send you on a safe race track so you can figure out the limits of your vehicle and also make the track wet to show how it changes in rain
though I guess that is harder with bikes and also not an option due to season
@wilx It actually comes from an old French word: "Damner" which derives from the Latin "Damnare". That said, it doesn't look like either of those actually refers to the person doing the condemning, only to the condemnation itself.
@wilx Oh, one more slightly interesting point: the religious overtone is a relatively recent addition. Until the 14th century (or so) "damn" basically just meant a guilty verdict and punishment that came with it.
it's just kinda weird to go there not really knowing what I want to buy
like I'm not sure how much just sitting on one will change
I'm considering getting something really cheap to basically plan to change after a shorter while
so that I can figure out what I really want in practice
like this
OTOH no ABS then
the other option is to basically spend more upfront hoping that throwing more money at the problem will ultimately get me something I'll be more likely to be happy with
@JerryCoffin I took a quick glance at the JS room a few minutes ago. And within 1 min. I found like 3 different people posting sexist/misogynic shit. lol
All these answer have arithmetic overflow on the shift correct? Because the 32bit value is shifted then cast to a 64? stackoverflow.com/questions/5919699/…
@Mikhail No--they're saved by the fact that the biggest shift they use is 12 bits). But yes, if you used the same code on a system with more than 32 processors, you'd need to fix the code.
@fredoverflow Windows has a limitation where you can't have more than 64 cores in a scheduling group. And 32 on a 32-bit system. Probably because they use a word-sized integer as a bitmask.
Which from a performance perspective makes a lot of sense since you can atomically read/write the mask.
And you get fast access to bit-scanning and stuff.
Intel's Cilk works pretty well. But it does have a bug. It doesn't always correctly register the main thread. And sometimes it gets it in the wrong processor group.
So you may end up with one group with 1 extra core and the other group with one fewer core.
Not a big deal if you have 100+ cores, but a big deal when I was testing it on my 4770K with a bootcfg setting to force the OS to give me 2 processor groups with 4 logical cores each.
Though at one point, I had access to a 44-core 88-thread box which basically showed that I still had no idea what I was doing even after emulating an environment with multiple processor groups.
I was watching supergirl, and they had an episode to be continued on flash, so I had to watch that until that episode and it continued on arrow, so I had to watch that and it continues on legends of tomorrow. I don't want to watch legends :( #firstworldproblems
@user2357112 So your time is too precious to contribute, but not quite precious enough to refrain from snarky comments? kk — Benjamin Lindqvist2 mins ago