@Borgleader He thinks data == data structure :( Trying to reinvent the wheel but doesn't know that it has to rotate freely from the object on top of it.
The real reason the Fraunhofer Institute has stopped licensing MP3 has little to do with superior audio codecs but more with the fact that the last of the patents for the format expired in the US in April this year. This means they no longer have any legal standing to charge a fee for the use of MP3.
Not only that but the format is still quite alive. The article reads like a press release for them to say "Hey, we aren't going to make money off mp3 anymore, so would you kindly adopt our proprietary new format?"
I think none of this holds water. If you look at history, tell me when has China been a colonial power? If it hasn’t been in the past, why should it be now?
What's the name of this fallacy? /cc @R.M the fallacy robot
The Imperial Chinese tributary system (Chinese: 朝貢體系) was the network of trade and foreign relations between China and its tributaries, which helped to shape much of East Asian affairs. Contrary to other tribute systems around the world, the Chinese tributary system consisted almost entirely of mutually-beneficial economic relationships, and member states of the system were politically autonomous and, in almost all cases, independent as well. Through the tribute system, which facilitated frequent economic and cultural exchange, the various dynasties of Imperial China "deeply influenced the culture...
In 1821, the Mexican War of Independence gave Mexico (including California) independence from Spain; for the next 25 years, Alta California remained a remote northern province of the nation of Mexico.
@wilx They're heckling him for ammunition, he knows it, and they're getting irritated that he won't give it. So they spin his refusal into an issue. Probably Trudeau's biggest asset and weakness is his political acumen. In that video, he's playing his political role well and opposition are playing theirs. Votes ultimately resolve these political conflicts (and are what these conflicts are often about).
@wilx I'm presuming his advisors have told him it's a question he should not answer. Politics is a pretty complex game, and sometimes conceding on simple answers can become a noose.
Growing up with my parents, I kind of learned the hard way how much power you give to a person by answering a question the way they want.
Nowadays every smelly stupid person has the means to write their thoughts in a way that everybody can read them. As a result we have all these homeopaths and what not advertising their shit and people fall for it.
Every time I see @BartekBanachewicz fall of the chat a tiny voice in my head screams "AAAAAAaaaaaaaahhhh"
Yesterday I saw someones praying beads on the ground. I did not bother to pick them up and place them somewhere more visible. I had confidence that Jesus would help him to find his beads
I think it's a pretty dumb decision to not inform people that an action was taken
it's a way to fend off the hordes of dumb users, totally unlike SO's policy of "improve, then we'll let you back in" where you should clearly know what you fucked up and what to do to fix it
@wilx I'm heavily impressed by his ability to maintain composure.
I know it's just because he thinks it's bad press to say he didn't meet with the ethics commissioner, so that's a little sad. But the spine on the guy. You know. It's not all bad.
My guess would be that you make a direct call using a lambda without embedding it into an std::function somewhere (not displayed in your question): you can't have both template parameter deduction and implicit conversions at the same time — Rerito2 hours ago
I guess I’ll have to head to the sandbox first. ;) Only thing I wanted to post is that I currently have a pseudonymous account on FB. It doesn’t have a telephone number registered (which seems to be hard), for email I used Yandex and it’s not been banned or forced to provide a mobile number (like my first attempt) in the last three months or so. :)
You can't just take any invasion or annexation and call it colonialism.
The Tibetan economy is dominated by subsistence agriculture. Due to limited arable land, the primary occupation of the Tibetan Plateau is raising livestock, such as sheep, cattle, goats, camels, yaks, dzo, and horses.
Without economic exploitation of the would-be colony, I wouldn't say it's colonialism.
Hey everyone. Please have a look at this proposal, vote and share your thoughts. Creating a C FAQ tag. I would especially appreciate input from those who have worked with the c++-faq tag.
@BartekBanachewicz If you’re still interested: I believe what triggered the requirement to verify by phone number was one of three things: 1: I had opened maybe a dozen tabs at once from a stash using 'URL Lister' (Fx addon). This is by far the most likely to me (can add an anecdote shortly). 2: The name I had then chosen was more a funny corruption of a word for a thing. It still should have vaguely passed for a name, but it was quite unlikely. I don’t know whether FB checks for that (possibly using ML, AI), but I plainly didn’t expect a verification _gate_ to come up after registration wi…
About the dozen tabs (or likely more, as I should have written): I had Twitter verification-block my account on the first setup page after creation, when I wanted to see how many underscores I’d be required to use to get a free handle. Well, every edit to that box surely triggered an API request and after adding a few, it got flagged as bot-like behaviour … :/ Smart as I am, I managed to recover the email address I had specified, though (clicked on the 'wrong address link in the verification mail) :D
@R.MartinhoFernandes This might work, too. I don’t know much about Chinese names.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Regarding the number: No not easy at all. Not owning a phone (lost my old one, never needed anything else on it besides the alarm and the music player), not wanting to spend cash for fake accounts and not getting out much (to buy them) all work antagonistically. ;) I’m also not sure if law here allows buying prepaid cards anonymously anymore at all.
Hmm, my wordiness really makes me stick out in every chat – on IRC and apparently also on SO. :/ – :D
@ratchetfreak I don’t try to stay anonymous, only pseudonymous. (Aaaaand that’s the smartass quote of the day, people!)
FB could also probably infer my identity going by which people’s profiles I’ve visited and also going by IP (didn’t bother to use proxies or TOR). I just don’t want a strongly linked account. Mostly no one on the Internet could link me. FB employees or government agencies would first need to realise they’d have to look for this and then they’d need to be interested. As I don’t even have said anything of value there, it’s probably more effort than it’d be worth to them.
Where I live (not sure whether I’ve disclosed it with this identity already ;) ), people also usually don’t need to really fear the government agencies. (I guess I can say, developed country, not the US.)
Which profiles? I’ve visited them being logged in, if you were referring to those. :)
As I’ve said, they could also do a very smart guess based on IP. ;) (I think there is no CG-NAT for IPv4 on this line.)
Separating identities is more of a protection measure for my real identity, to make doxxing harder, etc. Also to not have stupid things I’ve said be globally known for all of my profiles. :P Those kinds of issues. :) (I’m still contemplating if, when and where to tie them back up again for anyone interested.)
Although that might just be me personally not even caring when trump says something dumb, maybe there are people who go on facebook to be offended and write about that.
And I feel culture evolved enough that if you get called out for saying something offensive that you can get away with it anyways by saying you just tested the response or you felt that it was wrong and didn't know why it was so you said to to let other people tell you.
@nwp As can be inferred from the smiley, I wasn’t entirely serious about that point. ;) I also changed my true personality more than once in significant ways in the past years, so it’s probably sort of a good thing not to be instantly recognized. I can still tell people when I feel like it and I try to use this honourably (not to get any beginner bonus from it or similar).
Not that I was awful in the past, no. Just sufficiently different.
@Keno You seem to have high regards for peoples' opinions about you. Why is saying "I said that. I was young and naive and have since learned a thing or 2" not sufficient? Why is it important that they only see you the way you portrait yourself now?
@nwp I don’t know which culture you’re speaking of that allows this … “Hey, your nose is damned ugly!” […] “I really think it is and it was very mean of me to call it out, but I just wanted to see how you react.” – WTF!?
@nwp: Regarding the culture, are you referring to ‘pranksters’? That group of people is sure <very bad>, but do you also know the expression: ‘Not even ignoring’? :)
@Horttanainen Nope, not even that. (And why doesn’t your name auto-complete? Some special character? Mr. Funny Zerowidthnonbreakingspace? :P)
I mean culture as in being able to talk about things, trying to understand the reasons (that person is different. Interesting!). Or that they just don't bother. I'm having a hard time understand what repercussions you are avoiding with your pseudonym changing that make it worthwhile.
Then so be it, I don’t want to expand (at least in that way) on my personal history. :) (Smiley so you know I don’t feel wronged, comment explaining that addition.) What is it again that you are avoiding with your half-assed attempts at anonymity? (Capable government agencies you are probably not speaking about.) :P
@Keno Mostly loading times. I didn't like how my browser said "waiting for google-analytics" when loading sites and maybe not having a facebook like button served from facebook on every site does something too. I don't really care that much. Anonymity is dead and harvesting of mass data is normal. Nothing anyone can do about that.
@Keno I am not joking. Avoiding real encounters and worrying about internet anonymity is not healthy. You have developed a way too self-centered world view.
@nwp: Seriously, if you truly want to stay anonymous (including government-scale adversaries), it’s probably all-in or nothing. Else you would leave traces that could be used to put things back together. (It might work in the way of steganography, flying under the radar (and be even better at that), but after being spotted, it probably will only do so much to slow them (THEM) down.)
@BoundaryImposition Damn you. Because of you I'm aware of comma splicing and feel the need to fix it. I could have kept doing that for the rest of my life without having to waste thought on it.
I also changed my true personality more than once in significant ways in the past years, so it’s probably sort of a good thing not to be instantly recognized.
@VermillionAzure Now you’ll have to decide: Is it just weird or is it weird in the way Germans generally sound when writing English in chat-like situations? :)
I'd say, what's stopping you?
If you get quality posts to logically group under that tag, it will prove itself.
The end purpose of this proposal is to improve the quality of questions posted under the c tag
You can't hope to control that end. I wager that forces like bad college courses, a...
@BoundaryImposition You booked a perfect holiday :)
@Keno Yes, but your internet experience does not give you any help when meeting real people. Next time your neighbours are making a noise at night time go to their door and tell them to shut up. Then come back here and tell me how moist were your armpits.
If you want helpful feedback, your writing style comes off as pretentious and awkward. I don't know why, but it does. Just FYI. But it's not your fault I think
Don’t know why it is so. Indeed, fb. could be helpful. (Gosh, the first time I get asked this. :D) To clarify, I’m not trying to adapt for professional reasons or anything, it’s just that I’ve now heard this from, err… three different communities, so unless you happen to be the same people, this does count as strong indicator for me. It’s mostly only an issue because I got into very unproductive talk with a Swede over that, not quite recently. I now ignore his posts and he likely does […] mine.
As can be inferred from the smiley, I wasn’t entirely serious about that point. ;) I also changed my true personality more than once in significant ways in the past years, so it’s probably sort of a good thing not to be instantly recognized. I can still tell people when I feel like it and I try to use this honourably (not to get any beginner bonus from it or similar).
@VermillionAzure Soo, I should write dumber? Fwiw, I already try to emplace (:D) idioms when they spring to my mind. Would you have gone for: “As can be told by […]”?
@VermillionAzure Tbh, the first sentence reminds me of the cliché of an American college student. Very … unsophisticated. I don’t want to write like that and I probably also wouldn’t know how to do it even if I wanted. :/
Btw, I think when I wrote belittling above, I should have used patronizing. Too late to edit.
While we’re at coincidences, I’ve happened to watch an episode of Hawaii Five-O last night.
And in Lethal Weapon, they’ve used darkweb and TOR at an appropriate circumstance, with a believeable intention (saying there was marketplace for stolen collector’s coins there) and with the correct piece of information given that tracking stuff on TOR is hard. I was very pleasantly surprised. :)
@ratchetfreak I don’t think so. Years of training on NoScript (in the past), then uMatrix and also knowledge about things such as CSS animations and Fx’ behaviour wrt. GIFs should take any kind of surprise away. :)