@Morwenn Massive and (so far) fairly interesting. Even a bit of a semi-humor in places: "You can think of this as the “add a layer of packness” operator:". :-)
Google play rejected one of my apps, and felt the need to reject it twice within 5 minutes. The two rejection emails had the exact same content. Apparently I submitted the app for family rating but forgot it has a bit to do with alcohol.
Here are some examples of common apps that are ineligible for the program:
Apps that are rated ESRB Everyone but contain ads for gambling or any inappropriate content
Apps for parents or care-givers (e.g., breastfeeding tracker, developmental guide)
WTF is a breastfeeding tracker?!
The correction has to wait until I go back to civilization. Currently I am a peasant - building chicken coop, planting potatoes.
@Mikhail can you believe this. They say not only did Russia steal Crimea but they stole broach too. This is bullshit! http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20191014-who-really-owns-borsch
Further, with borsch I think many Russians believe it Russian because the Ukraine is Russian. This reflects the complex interpretation of Ukrainian as a regional rather than ethnic/racial distinction. Made more complicated by the fact that many people residing on the Ukrainian territory wouldn't be, or even self identify, as part of the Ukrainian ethnicity.
I'm resigning as a Stack Overflow Moderator.
Thank you to everyone who has worked hard to make this Q&A site what it is.
I'm resigning for three reasons:
Stack Overflow Inc. has forgotten how to lead, how to persuade, and how to talk with the community. This has been a slow decline since 2014...
@Rick His points are the same re-hashed points that people have been making for fucking ages
This channel alone is proof of the attitudes of those who shall not be tarnished. They refused to allow this to organically grow into what it wanted to. In the end, they lost a huge number of great active people.
@thecoshman I find it amusing when people say they didn't see this whole thing coming when my first brush with it was this channel and how it was handled
I interviewed an intern candidate yesterday, and it blew me away that the candidate didn't know what zero factorial was. First time I've seen it. It felt like a CS student not knowing what the modulus operator is.
@thecoshman hmm... Because every single intern candidate I've interviewed knew what zero factorial is. This is the first time I came across one that didn't.
@Mysticial Not a particularly interesting thing in itself, but still seems pretty strange that somebody would be ignorant of it.
I'd presume this came out of something like writing a recursive factorial function. If that's so, I never saw the point in waiting for 0--why not stop at 1 and finish one "iteration" faster?
@JerryCoffin I learned that 0! = 1 and x^0 = 1 in middle school in algebra. So I consider it as part of the general knowledge that everybody (with at least a high school diploma) should know.
I've had one case where the candidate didn't know what a factorial was. But that was due to a language barrier. So that doesn't count.
Once I explained it, he immediately knew what I was talking about.
@JerryCoffin That's exactly what the question was.
@Mysticial Years ago, a friend of mine thought there should be about a one week course that 17 year-olds should take that included some of the basics of life. If they didn't pass the test at the end of it, they wouldn't be considered an adult, regardless of their age. Not sure if he'd have included zero factorial in that though--it was more along the lines of "coffee is hot. If you spill some on yourself, you're going to get burned, and can't blame the people who sold you the coffee."
More relevantly though, I have to admit I'm not even certain when I learned that 0! = 1. Seems like probably around 7th grade or so, but I'm honestly not sure (and I'm pretty sure I can't go back and look at old text books either--the last time I moved, I decided it wasn't worth packing up the stone tablets).
@Mysticial Don't remember who, but somebody sued McDonald's, as I recall. And yes, it was shortly after that happened. But Joe brought up the idea for years before that as well--he thought an awful lot of well known lawsuits were pretty stupid.
Most of the time when I ask the factorial question (which I only ask intern candidates), I'll phrase it in a way to force the user to perform input sanitation. And most of the candidates will ask about negative factorials and non-integer factorials - which is fine. Though I've had one candidate go so far as to mention the Gamma function and Stirling's formula. (he passed, got the offer, and accepted)
@Mgetz Her medical expenses were not even close to the $2.86 million she was originally awarded (though the $640K it was reduced to may have at least been close).
@Mgetz The question isn't whether they were hurt. It's whether it's reasonable for them to blame a coffee vendor for the fact that the coffee is hot. The answer to that is simple: no. It's perfectly normal to boil the water while making coffee, and to serve it as hot as possible. Ergo, any temperature up to and including "still boiling" should be expected.
@JerryCoffin so the jury semi agreed with you, and even admonished the plaintiff. But industry standard was 150 not 190 degrees. McDonalds management was aware of this and their coffee machines even shipped at the correct temp. However, their manuals and install instructions deliberately changed that. Moreover McDonald's showed a pattern of appalling behavior in regards to others. The issue was that McDonalds had done appalling behavior in regards to the industry as a whole and not the plaintiff
A reasonable excuse for suing the vendor would be if (for example) the coffee was actually in a pressurized container, which allowed the water it contained to be raised to a temperature substantially higher than the normal boiling point of water.
regardless the resulting legislation because of so called 'tort reform' has lead to cases where companies get off scott free in effect in cases where million dollar verdicts are actually appropriate
@Mgetz And? Sorry, but "too hot to drink" is exactly how most coffee is normally served. I can hardly remember anybody ever just picking up a cup of coffee and drinking it. The norm is to pick it up, blow on it a bit, swirl it around, blow on it a bit more. When you finally start to drink, you suck in a tiny sip of coffee, and (especially at first) you routinely suck in air along with it to cool it to the point that it doesn't burn you.
AFAIK They were not treating the lawsuit seriously and expected the jury to do the same. However, their disrespectful behavior towards the lady caused the jury to take her side.
@JerryCoffin clearly you've made up your mind, I'm not going to argue with you because that's what it would be. The fact of the matter is that McDonalds management were well aware that their coffee was being served in appropriately and deliberately did nothing because the cost of settling was cheaper.
@Mgetz ...and you've made up your mind that what they did was "inappropriate". You've apparently further made up your mind that courts are intended not to enforce laws, but what you consider "appropriate". The first may be open to argument, but the second is clearly false.
@Mgetz Perhaps you've forgotten (or never knew?) that I spent roughly 20 years as a consultant (and sometimes expert witness) in civil cases? Mostly IP (patent/copyright/trade secret) cases, but that has no effect on the role of the court.
@JerryCoffin Patent and Copyright law has largely been replaced with statutory law. Until the McDonalds case most torts were 100% common law. That is no longer the case and hasn't been since that case
In law, common law (also known as judicial precedent or judge-made law) is the body of law derived from judicial decisions of courts and similar tribunals. The defining characteristic of “common law” is that it arises as precedent. In cases where the parties disagree on what the law is, a common law court looks to past precedential decisions of relevant courts, and synthesizes the principles of those past cases as applicable to the current facts. If a similar dispute has been resolved in the past, the court is usually bound to follow the reasoning used in the prior decision (a principle known...
@Mgetz Even assuming that's 100% correct (it's not, really, but...) it's irrelevant. The basic division of labor (so to speak) in a court is that judges decide matters of law, and juries decide matters of fact. Essentially the only exception to that is a magistrate, who acts as both judge and jury, so s/he can decide matters of both fact and law.
@Mgetz You're still missing the fundamental point. The judge is supposed to make all decisions about the law. He then instructs the jury about the applicable law--even if s/he just wrote the applicable law 10 minutes ago in his chambers, that part of the decision is still entirely the judge's, not the jury's. Once the jury has been instructed about the applicable law, they meet and decide whether the evidence that was presented was sufficient to show violation of that law.
@Mgetz I'm not sure if you're missing the point on purpose or not, but the level of damages awarded wasn't the question. The question was whether your (or somebody's) expectation of a "reasonable" temperature for coffee is something that was or should have been enforced as a legal matter.
@JerryCoffin if we’re still talking about the actual case then, again, putting it down to mostly 'expectation of a "reasonable" temperature for coffee' is not a charitable characterisation of how the trial reached its conclusion
@Mgetz You're mistaking "it relates to something factual" as meaning "It's a matter of fact". I can point to (for example) a court precedent. It's either a fact that the decision was made or not--but that doesn't make it a matter of fact. It's still a matter of law.
sorry to insist, but it grates me to off-handedly second guess how a judicial decision was reached considering that's the whole point of a justice system, and I feel like that has an actual society cost (that Mgetz already elaborated on re: tort reform)
@LucDanton When I was doing consulting on legal projects, one of the things I learned was that virtually every case is second-guessed, often for years at a time.
even if it hasn’t affected me personally to this day what with different legal systems and all that, the case has enough renown that it’s not a complete unknown over here (well perhaps not as much these days) and I worry all the same—if not for the immediate consequences, but at least when it comes to that particular attitude of second-guessing
@Mgetz You really need to apologize for that. I've read the full transcript of that case about a dozen times, and talked through it with at least three different lawyers. Your accusation to the contrary, and assumption that my disagreement with you must stem from ignorance, and/or claim that such ignorance is wilful is a completely unacceptable personal attack.
@Mgetz What part of 20 years consulting on legal cases did you miss? These weren't lawyers I hired--they were lawyers who hired me, and thought it was important enough to talk through it and make sure I knew the case (among many others).
@Mgetz What the hell do you think that has to do with whether I've read the transcript of the case? Sorry, but you've descended into just throwing mud around to try to avoid admitting that you've made a personal attack based on outright falsehoods.
I can fix the bug in a few hours: 30 minutes while my computer cancels Windows updates, 2 minutes to fix the bug, 15 minutes to compile & run the test suite, and more than 1h while I wait for the CI to finish
@Rick It's made of a template hell, stolen codes, algorithms I don't understand, stuff from research papers, and ad-hoc algorithms I didn't prove but appear to work
@JerryCoffin Ok you've accused me of slandering you, and slandered me multiple times. Reading the case transcript does not change the fact that your experience in law is irrelevant in the extreme to the case as it's a completely different type of law
@Mgetz Common law is based on decisions in prior cases, yes--but (at least in the US) it has a basis on statute. But, there's lots of common law that applies to patent cases--anybody dealing with patents at all knows and considers the implications of things like Markman (just for one really well known example). If you don't know the applicable common law, you barely have a clue of what you're doing.
@JerryCoffin When you approach something from the perspective that the other person is an idiot it comes off extremely condescending and it's wrong. The fact of the matter is that my parents are personal friends with a lawyer that was involved in the case (albeit indirectly). Furthermore expecting appeal to authority to work here... is asking a lot.
@Mgetz I certainly didn't approach anything with a perspective that anybody here was or is an idiot. Ignorant of the subject matter at hand? Maybe, sometimes. not an idiot.
As for appeal to authority...I'm not getting it. I pointed to years of experience in the area, not to claim that I'm an authority, but only to defend the fact that I wasn't speaking out of complete ignorance.
@Mgetz If you can point to reasonably specific instances of treating people as idiots (or being condescending or disrespectful in general), I'll work on modifying my behavior. But something so general that's it's basically little more than "yeah, you suck" doesn't give me much to go on as to what and/or how I should improve.
@JerryCoffin Tone and approach come off really harsh, it's hard to point out specific items. The best advice I've ever gotten on this sort of thing is "First seek to understand". Basically if you can find out where the other person is coming from you can seek to fill the gaps that they may have, or help them understand where you're coming from.
The "why" is simple and straightforward. If I'm honestly being rude, condescending, or harsh toward others, then I clearly shouldn't be a room owner. Nobody should be above the law (or the rules, etc.)
So, just got my first message from SO.jobs. They are offering me a 3x salary increase. Is this normal for so/jobs? I'm not interested in the job, just curious about the inflated salary. Also could this reasonable expected to result in a Job offer or is this just flim flam.
I'm not sure I understand how to use the idiom in this context, but I'd like to reply something along the lines of "This is way above your pay grade". I'm not looking for "Salary bracket" or something like that. More like "out of your depths"
@CaptainGiraffe I believe the only people who can send you anything there are people who've paid to advertise a job, so it probably filters out most of the complete flim flam. On the other hand, it could include some who (for example) have a couple hundred bucks to spend, and are sure that angel investor they ran into at the bar is going to pony up a few million dollars any day now...
@Mysticial I'm very comfortable with my ~60k, I'm extremely happy with what I do. I'd still like to make some sort of reply, you know, just for giggles.
My brother before he retired, made about 5x as much as I did. We often talk about our jobs. He was very successful starting out as an MBA.
with a twitter architecture when someone like really famous who has 10 million users, would you push the updates to their followers using sockets, or would you use a rest service and have devices grab updates from the server.
@Rick I'd probably use a pub-sub architecture, so when they tweet something, it gets pushed to the publish queue. The queue would probably support either push or pull--push via websocket if the user is available. If they aren't available soon enough, it sits waiting for pulls (and eventually probably gets discarded from the queue completely).
@JerryCoffin so sockets are used to push out data via a publishing queue, and there is a separate process for pulls which follows a different life cycle
So they execute two different strategies for updating the device.
@Rick Keep in mind, I'm only talking about one thing that would work, and tends to fit with how people like things--but without looking at their source code, it's probably impossible to be certain whether it matches what they actually do.
You could figure out at least part of it based on their client-side code, if you were ambitious enough.