Damn, there is no top list for worst tech book ever written. Otherwise I would anonymously vote the one I am currently reading 10 times.
Still waiting for a future meta post complaining about a sock puppet ban on multiple accounts of one suspect, with the user explain how it's from 10 legit accounts - him + his wife and their 8 kids ... and they are all on stackoverflow.
Every weekend, Mik fantasizes about the scenario of over throwing the top 1%.
Q: Is Australia socialist?
A: Any country is 'socialist' compared to the USA.
A: Oh dear oh dear. If this question is asked by an American then the answer may well be"yes". If it's asked by anyone else, the answer is "no."
Since I deal with properties on regular basis, I can tell you that if you have decent hardwood floor and if you accidentally scratched it. You can sand it and repaint it. If your hardwood timber floor boards are good, you can sand it for at least 3-5 times. The thicker the board is, the more times you can sand it. Painting interior and repolish floors are the cheapest way to make a place look newer if you know how to do it yourself.
Today I learned the universe started out orange. Therefore the orange guy getting elected as president is the first step towards the apocalypse. I should start a cult and get followers and have them give me money while I explore the signs inside DS3.
@ratchetfreak It's a bit hard to roll a trench into the hardwood floor with a chair, unless you somehow make something with the weight of an elephant to sit on it.
@Mysticial really? there's rules against posting a really good answer if it's... automatically produced? Like, what are they doing wrong by C+P a good answer from a bot?
There's a new website out there called Ask Roboflow, which learns from questions and answers posted on Stack Exchange sites and attempts to generate an answer for a particular question. The site tends to generate answers of... questionable correctness, which is acknowledged by the author of the s...
I've put a break point where my code breaks, but all I get is, "The inferior stopped because it triggered an exception. Stopped in thread 0 by Exception ... read access violation at 0x0, flags=0x0"
I know qt objects are not copyable, but I don't think I am making one, I have a class that I declared: Slider& newSlider, then construct it with newSlider(*ui->slider), which I think should only make a reference to that slider.
I just don't understand why it breaks. Maybe I will need to try and recreate the problem somehow. Qt just uses the QSlider *slider = new QSlider; But my controller takes references to classes so: Controller(ClassA &a...), so all I do is CustomSlider newSlider(*ui->slider); Controller(newSlider);
Then in the controller I make a call to newSliders updateValue(int) function.
CustomSlider& newSlider(*ui->slider); not the one I commented
Ever since I got a TV, I moved to my living room PC where I can work and watch TV/Anime at the same time. Now I remote into the PCs in that computer room.
So that standing desk with all the monitors is basically collecting dust. :(
@StackedCrooked Mine were very subtle. Only one of my chairs would damage the floor. And I didn't notice it for a while.
It would basically leave very shallow impressions on the wood that you couldn't see unless the lighting was right and you viewed it at a very specific angle.
@Mgetz Yeah, not gonna deny that. But at the same time, the one chair I have that can do that also has shitty wheels that have a small area of contact with the floor.
@Mysticial If you rent it out, put in something like Pergo flooring. Almost nothing short of a bulldozer can damage it, and it has a 20 or 30 year warranty if they do manage to.
@JerryCoffin It's not denting. I've dropped pretty heavy things on it and they bounce off without any noticeable damage. But if I sit on that one office chair and roll around, it leaves those subtle impressions under the wheels.
@Mysticial Hmm...interesting. If it doesn't dent when you drop stuff, it probably isn't real wood after all (or it's really hard wood, but you'd probably have had to pay extra for that, so you'd know if you had it).
@JerryCoffin It might be denting. But the denting is so small that it's hard to notice. Whereas the chair leaves lines whenever you roll it with your full weight.
@Mysticial Yeah--may be mostly a matter of the chair concentrating the pressure onto a small area (which, I think is pretty much where the conversation started).
@JerryCoffin If you can fall through one floor by sitting with no kinetic energy, and you assume that all the floors are built to the same amount of structural integrity, I'd say there's a real possibility that you end up in the basement.
@Mysticial Yeah--and there's a pretty big gap from there down to the highest density materials without extreme compression. Osmium is only ~2.2e3 kg/m^3.
@JerryCoffin Which has me thinking. If you teleport 1 golf ball of neutron star material into a vacuum far away from anything. How big of an explosion would it generate?
@Mysticial Honestly, I'm not sure what happens. If memory serves, the pressure in a neutron star collapses the electrons into the nucleus, where they basically merge with the protons to create neutrons. I'm not sure if those neutrons are then stable, or if they quickly decay back into proton/electron pairs when the pressure is released. If they decay, it obviously releases a lot more energy than if they don't.
At the very least, it quickly expands to reduce the density to normal levels. But in a vacuum, there would be no protons/electrons available for those neutrons to combine with and make normal matter. OTOH, they're neutral, so there's (a little) gravity, and no electrostatic attraction/repulsion. I doubt the gravity is enough to stop (or even significantly slow) the expansion, but unless (at least some of) the neutrons decay I don't see much mechanism for it to release energy either.
I'm thinking that within a neutron star, the gravity is fighting against the nuclear forces? So once you release gravity, the nuclear forces will "spring" open? Probably way too simple of a guess.
But nuclear forces aside, I see no reason for a bunch of neutrons to separate.
@Mysticial Well, that's the question: when the gravity fuses a proton and electron into a neutron, does it produce a normal (stable) neutron, or does it produce something that just acts like a neutron while there's pressure to hold them together, but as soon as the pressure is released, they decay back to their original form? And I don't know the answer to that.
What happens to Protons and Electrons when a Neutron star forms? At some point gravity overcomes the Pauli Exclusion Principle ( I assume) and they are all forced together. What happens in the process?
Seems to indicate that they are fairly normal neutrons, but that doesn't mean they're entirely stable. This seems to be saying the neutron cloud would de-compress, and many of the neutrons would decay into proton/electron pairs, so it would decompose into reasonably normal atoms--but the exact percentage of neutrons that would decompose seems uncertain. In any case, once you have atoms, you undoubtedly get some chemical composition, most of it also exothermic.
Overall, I think the short answer is that a lot of energy is released (though I don't know enough to estimate more precisely than that.
“This generous act was not only done for the good of the school and its students, but also done out of the love and support of Yusi by a caring mother,” the family said in a statement to the Times.
I don't know how Shinoa sounds, but if that ending vowel is long and low I would think it's male and if it's short and abrupt I would think it's feminine
@Rick Names with gender ambiguity are often entirely intentional in the west. Many consider it best to plan for the possibility that your child might be trans (or whatever) so they may want a name that doesn't tie them to the gender you thought of them as having at birth.
@JerryCoffin that's a good point but couldn't they just change their name later on.
I guess that does carry an extra burden of having to change your name. But I also think names set the tone for how others view us and thus how we view ourselves.
@JerryCoffin First time I've heard that explanation. I'd find it hard to believe that would make a significant portion of those with gender-neutral names. Especially since the LGBTQ movement didn't pick up steam until relatively recently (20 years?). Most of the people transitioning now would've been born before the movement so the parents (baby boomers) would be less likely to have done that intentionally.
@Rick They could, of course, but some parents think it shouldn't be necessary. I think there's also at least some sense that giving a child only strongly gendered names might basically impose a choice of gender on the child, that the parents don't intend.
@Mysticial I first heard it from my older brother, probably between 20 and 25 years ago, but I've since heard a number of other people imply more or less the same (though it rarely seems to be stated really clearly or directly).
@JerryCoffin For the most part, I think people need to told how to live and how to be in the world and that might come from society or something else. I think society is moving in a direction where gender should not be a constraint on your freedom. Which is consistent
@JerryCoffin Even in the west. I know of a couple cases among family/friends where the parents outright rejected/disowned them after coming out gay.
Doesn't make their life any easier.
But that problem is broader though. I know of Korean guy who got completely disowned by his side of the family after marrying a Chinese girl. Like this cut off his education funding leading him to fend for himself. We know the parents of the wife and they say it's great now because they basically have an extra son in the family.
@JerryCoffin Those societies are backward and are poor just like 1820's America, and if you look at their history you will find the opposite to be true.
I think it's also important to deconstruct how we see our selves. To use an analogy sometimes the design of the building dictates how it functions. This would be true with how we construct our identities.
@Mysticial Yeah, I doubt the world will ever be free of narrow-mindedness, bigotry, etc. It's like playing wack-a-mole: every time you hit one, another pops up. On the other hand, I think things are improving. Now, a few people might get pissed off if their child marries somebody of "the wrong race". In historical terms, it wasn't very long ago at all, however, that doing so was likely to lead to somebody getting lynched (or even a trial and conviction).
@JerryCoffin it's funny that you should mention race because I think race is an entirely meaningless construct, the concept has no foundation in genetics or science.
@Rick Certainly how I have tried to construct my identity. I've constructed my identity as a God, with the intended function of getting gullible fools religious followers to send me money (and an occasional virgin). Unfortunately, that hasn't worked out so well yet...
@Rick I'd agree that it's a social construct, but that doesn't render it meaningless. Mathematicians frequently say things like: "let us use S to represent the set of all integers satisfying <come criteria>". That defines a meaning for S. In the case of math, the name is usually defined quite unambiguously, but many people don't care. Although something like race is rarely as clearly delineated, it can still carry some meaning.