@ScY Look at it from their perspective for a moment: before digital keys, the could depend on replacement keys costing approximately $N/year. Digital keys divided N by (at a guess) a factor of 10 or so. Looking at hotels as a whole, this attack probably increased costs by 0.000001% or something. Bottom line: going back to "physical" keys would be a large loss, with little or nothing gained in return.
@Mysticial ...well, and a little about what code actually tries to use SIMD/multiple cores if available. If he phrased his basic premise narrowly ("new CPUs haven't drastically improved single-core, scalar performance") we'd probably all agree with him (but it would be so trivial the most common reaction would probably be: "well duh").
@Morwenn So my professor/advisor from grad school joked about it being written by Russians in the middle of winter. I'm not entirely sure he was joking.
Write a Java Code for this problem please: A mass m = 2 kilograms is attached to the end of a rope of length r = 3 meters. The mass is whirled around at high speed. The rope can withstand a maximum tension of T = 60 Newtons. Write a program that accepts a rotation speed v and ...
@Lalaland It is allowed, but not homework dumps or requests for writing code.
The site doesn't discriminate against homework questions. They're treated the same as everything else. It's just that homework questions have a higher tendency to suck. Which creates the impression that they aren't allowed.
How many terrorist attacks have there been since 9/11? I reckon that countries like France and England have been hit more often after 9/11? So why focus so much on external threats if the internal problems are much more severe?
For random-access iterators it'll call operator+= instead of operator++, and I don't know whether a compiler can always optimize operator+= until it's equivalent to operator++.