@Mikhail If you're easily replaceable, the union won't help much, and if you're irreplaceable, you don't need a union. Unions only help if you're right at the point that replacing a small percentage of people is cheap/easy, but replacing a large percentage of them is expensive/difficult.
@Mysticial Replacing even one is expensive enough that companies not only need a good reason to do so, but often keep people they'd probably be better off firing.
You know what's lacking in this world? True geniuses. The likes of Issac Newton. There are less true geniuses than billionaires in this world. Money can not buy what does not exist in human society and without true geniuses, we can not get to the next level.
@Rick People are not God, we are flawed. That's life. True geniuses are still just people. The difference between them and vast majority of others is that, they can lead people into exploring field that people were not aware before.
I've been on the site for 1 day and I've lost a lot of respect for humanity. Curiously my chief criticism is that everybody is forced to look the same. A random, matching system would do better.
I thought that I have found a perfect laser level for surveying the big piece of land - the set includes everything we need, the accuracy is high, the price low. It even looks great. Then I found out it's for indoor use only with operative distance slightly greater than 5 meters.
Another terrible analogy. I'm confident the people on it are fine. It a just that the outlet limits your ability to express yourself. I'm sure the people are more interesting than their bios.
No one is a paragraph, people are complicated. People love games and no one plays for the same thing. No one wants to lose so everyone sets different objectives to secure a win, and their ego at same time.
Playing games in real life is more fun. Real estate agent accused me of liking to play games (so we can get the land for lower price). But the seller wouldn't sell if they were not happy with the price.
Well it's more sad when the ego and pride prevents you from seeing things as they are. It prevents progress and retards development. That's why clarity of thought is important, know what you might not be aware of. In other words systemic critical thinking and introspection
The end is that everyone is happy - we get the land, seller is selling at a price more than double of what they have paid 6 years ago, solicitors and agent get their share. Did I not mention state revenue - large amount for doing nothing.
Not sure what the comment means. I was trying to communicate that the tinder matching system, seems to be incomplete, and reductionist to a single sentence (which often plays a meta game, and is expressed using language and terms outsiders won't understand) . You'd benefit from communicating with specificity.
On an unrelated note, have you folks ever outsourced part of a project to a freelancer? We have SBIR funds for about 4 months to do C++, but I'm not sure the best way to find a person.
How to keep oneself for being forever humble, and yet always full of self confidence? It's to always venture into new fields. Just as I am gathering more knowledge in A.I. & robotics, this survey task is project me into a complete newbie again.
@TelKitty bubble levels are nice for individual items, but if you want to say get all the plasterboard on the same line so you don't waste materials they won't do
It's hard to get all the plasterboard on the same line anyways. Frames behind plasterboard might not be totally aligned to start with, then there are glues between plasterboard and frame. You need to put filler in between plasterboards and when they dry, it might be uneven.
Also you can use the bubble level across the line to make sure it's roughly even.
If the solution to "beginners are not welcome" ends up being "experts are not welcome" then it is game over. I resisted it for years, too, but a separate, beginner focused stack overflow (with beginner oriented rules, and special beginner tooling) feels inevitable to me at this point if the site wants to survive. — Jeff Atwood8 hours ago
I used to think that too until I saw the other side of it.
For example, the colleagues around me. Everybody has questions they want to ask on SO, but nobody dares to ask because they all know they'll get shit on.
They're no beginners by a long shot.
The shit users that we see on SO are the minority help vampires that don't know better.
So what SE is trying to do is to get veteran users to shop shitting on new users since that's hurting their image.
But in doing so, they're now shitting on the veteran users.
The cesspool of vampire content is unavoidable, but there's an even bigger problem now.
More generally, they don't want to do anything that could possibly reduce the site's traffic. It's been fairly "flat" for a while now, and I'm sure they'd prefer to see it grow instead (though I don't support this is exactly news to most Loungers).
@Mysticial One problem (at least as I see it) is that a fair (unfair?) number of users have decided on a number of very specific "things" they want to see in every question, whether any of them is actually necessary to provide a good answer to a particular question or not.
@JerryCoffin I'll agree to that. At least partially. I've seen people complain about an MVCE because the includes (or main) is missing but the code present is clearly enough to answer the question (without even needing to compile it)
@Rick It's possible to implement vector::iterator as a pointer. In, say, 2000, that was pretty common. I'd be more surprised to see it nowadays though.
I find it to be a strange dichotomy, they are like two different concepts sharing the same space. like a union of what would otherwise be a disjoint set of concepts.
@JerryCoffin is it still possible? I thought that they were required to be a different type to avoid overload pitfalls when a function is overloaded for pointers and for vector iterators
in the extremely simplified model, the address to the instruction is written to the program counter register and then the next instruction is read from there. But in practise there's a lot more involved on modern processors
I feel like with things like MIPS you felt like you were controlling it more directly because you had stuff like delay-slots to deal with
but with the modern levels of processor-controlled reorderings and stuff it always seems a little more complicated. Always one more micro-code thing, always one more cache-level. But I guess that's just speaking from ignorance because I've never tried to have more than a surface-level understanding of those things
well you can just straight up increment it, but you also write a non-contiguous value to the program-counter when you do "jumps". I think the "TSC" is the thing that just counts up regardless of what else happens
@Mysticial Well, of course in a modern CPU it's probably more complex than that. But for the moment, let's assume something old enough that the way it acts matches reasonably closely with how it's actually implemented.
@PeterT you are right we can get operations to jump between the different elements in say an array, we can jump to the back and we can jump 5 elements forward, but it's always part of some process that's being driven by something counting up one step at a time like the gears of a clock
Yeah, sure if you're asking how "progress" or "time" is achieved out of a solid-state processor, then yeah it's just something resonating at a frequency like the pendulum of a clock
@Rick No, it's not. When you do something like indexing into an array with a[10], it's not loading from a and then incrementing 10 times. It's loading from a, taking the size of an element of a, multiplying by 10, and adding the result once. The x86 even has instructions specifically for tasks like this, so even at the assembly language level, I can do things like assume ebx ptr dword; mov eax, ebx[10].
That will take 10, scale it by the size of a dword (4), add that to ebx, and load a value from the resulting address into eax.
@Mysticial Also called "daylight savings time", or "summer time" (and I'm pretty sure I've heard less...pleasant names as well).
@Rick More importantly, however, do an entirely different set of steps than you suggested. Adding 10 by incrementing 10 times might be halfway reasonable, but adding (say) 2^60 by incrementing 2^60 times is considerably less practical.
@JerryCoffin your right, what I meant to say by jumping 5 elements forwards or back, by means of a mathematical operation, like multiplication or some other set of steps, not directly related to the array itself. That the walk we perform might not seem linear with respect to the array, how the elements are accessed or traversed, but that the discontinuity we create emerges from a process that is fundamentally linear and constant in time.
@Rick To be a solid burn, you need to be sure that the burnee understands what you've said. Kind of reminds me of a time years ago a guy got really upset with me until I explained my position. When he was younger, he'd apparently been a football player, and during a game one night, somebody had apparently called him a "wigger" (apparently a contraction of "white" and "nigger"), but at the time, he didn't know what that meant.
I thought it was hilarious, and he was pissed at me until I explained that what I thought was hilarious was a bigot doing his absolute best to be an asshole (which I'd have thought was one of the easiest jobs possible) and failing at it. Until about then, I'd never even considered the possibility, and probably wouldn't have believed it was possible. But I'd have clearly been wrong.
Somehow I could almost picture the moron getting home, and his mother doing a warped version of the standard mother's wheeze about: "I spent 14 hours in labor, and spent 18 years raising you to be a narrow-minded, bigoted, racist jerk, and now you can't even be an asshole properly! You're no son of mine!"
@LucDanton I'm mostly about writing fake news. Part of the confusion is on the requirements for delegues du personnel, which is so unheard of in America, I'm not sure how to best translate it. Maybe employee delegates...
The percentages are lower for smaller workplaces, but, even in workplaces with between 20 and 49 employees, 20% had both a trade union delegate and elected representatives and 45% had just elected representatives.
I think to many outsiders it would seem that French employees are required to be part of something resembling a union, as they are granted a bargaining position. This would envoke a sacrebleu at many American firms. It certainly did when a friend's company tried to setup shop in France.
@Mikhail not to assail pointlessly you with information, but to get to the point: what if the 'some other bullshit' angle was on your end? what if labour relations was just the normal thing?
@LucDanton I don't particularly know or have anything against the French system. But I would like to emphasize the rather boring point, that in the US, there is less worker protection.