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03:33
Whoever thinks that the government debt does not have to be repaid can thank yourself for the sky rocketing inflation.
 
5 hours later…
08:44
It's getting cold and Big Botany is falling asleep
 
1 hour later…
fog
fog
10:14
Hi! : ) Does anyone have experience in starting a programming company?
 
7 hours later…
17:34
@fog I'd done publishing, scientific instruments, and working a series B chip company now
17:56
I keep coming back to this question, is there some good way to pass std::span and std::initializer list to the same function. Something like foo({1,2,3},{4,5,6},{7,8,9}).
There's a proposal in flight to add an std::initializer_list constructor to std::span
Well, not a constructor
But an explicit deduction guide
You can probably provide it yourself by reopening std :D
(and other things you shouldn't do)
Ugh, I can't find it, I'm sure I haven't dreamt of it
18:21
@JosephMansfield I haven't managed to find a definitive answer but I suspect it's to do with braces being used for uniform initialization. The call g({1, 2, 3}) could also be taken to mean g(Foo(1, 2, 3)) where Foo is any class with a constructor taking three ints. — dshepherd Mar 27 '16 at 21:59
I've just been playing with this dude: godbolt.org/z/551oP8b9W
18:47
I'm sorry for your loss
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19:04
@JerryCoffin spinlaunch.com these dudes have a good promotional video
@Mikhail So they do. They physics of the basic idea seem...fraught, to put it nicely, but maybe they have something in mind well beyond what's obvious.
Why? I mean it's possible to accelerate something until it can fire upward? Converting electrical energy to forward motion seems like a win compared to powering your rocket using dead dinosaurs?
@SergeyA No... unfortunately my schools servers are from '89 this is the updated version .d — Alp E 15 mins ago
@Mikhail Sure. Problem is that to make a meaningful difference within a couple hundred feet (or so) you have to accelerate extremely sharply (e.g., 20+ G's).
What is escape velocities these days, something like 7 miles per second :-)
19:21
@Mikhail anything that can accelerate faster than 9.8 m/s^2 continuously
19:58
* assuming no air resistance, but also assume gravity is the same though the whole atmosphere :-)
which its not
well it's not the same at all points in the gravity well
because the earth is not a perfect sphere
 
2 hours later…
22:21

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