@StackedCrooked Oh, you like Polly Jean? Have you ever seen this one with Nick Cave? (Damn, there used to be a studio version of that one, but it seems to be gone from YT.)
@StackedCrooked Actually, I never got into PJH. The one CD I have of her never really caught on me. I only know a bit about her because she was once with Nick Cave, and because of her brother Mick who's been a founding member of the Bad Seeds. And Björk really isn't "of alternative music genres", is she??
Ha, @Stacked, I found that official music video I was looking for using google. I can't see it here in Germany anymore (and that's probably why it wasn't linked for me), but I did watch it a few years ago, and presumably you still can. Oh, and it's on vimeo, too.
@StackedCrooked Well, all I can say is that it definitely is a very interesting video. :-| As for the music... Did I mention I never really warmed up to PJ? And it's not for trying. I think she certainly is a very interesting and unique artist. But I guess I just need it a tad more, um, melodic?
Windows® XP Service Pack 2 or better Intel® Core™ 2 Duo 2.0 GHz, Core i3, AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 or better 2 GB RAM NVIDIA® GeForce® 7800, ATI Radeon™ X1800, Intel HD 3000 or better (256MB of video RAM and shader model 3.0 or better) 25 GB available HDD space Broadband Internet connection Keyboard and mouse
> Some have become concerned about loss of serendipity in today's highly connected culture. Apple Maps is an attempt to reverse this trend. — Kevlin Henney
@StackedCrooked Well, that's a bit to medieval-orchestral-classic for me. Too much pathos. That also applies to the other songs on YT I just listened into.
i think, there's a kind of paradox there that the more macho the music, the more chance it's gay males performing. like in ac/dc, or rainbow, or queen (of old).
@StackedCrooked You know, that got me thinking. So I dug out my old YT account and looked at my favs there. You want some more female vocalists of alternative music genres?
Few people have heard about Kali Azzura, who was once a famous singer on YT. She had incredible cover versions. This is my favorite, including harrumph and all. :)
A Fine Frenzy had one album that I liked songs from, and Alison Sudol (who, basically, is A Fine Frenzy) feeatured in a stunning animated short film as actress, composer, and singer.
I love Julia Stone's Music, here still singing with her brother Angus. Currently, both are solo on tour.
This I once ran into on YT. I think she's a Australian actress, but I don't really know. I might like this more due to the video than due to the music. The song is still good, though.
Last year, a friends of mine went to see Katie Costello, who played in Berlin with Greg Holden. However, a few hours after the two recorded this video, she got sick and had to be taken to the hospital, so that my friend and I only saw Greg. (We hadn't known him before, but he is good, too.)
I think Agnes Obel lives in Berlin; or she used to, anyway. You can still hear her Nordic accent, though. I like this song.
This is just in this list to catch you off guard. :)
@StackedCrooked I must have learned started to learn C++ in 1992, I think. I first probably looked at HTML in the mid-90s. It might even have been after 1996, though.
@StackedCrooked Oh. According to the dates on the files of my first C++ project, that was 1994, not 1992. Mhmm. Yeah, I think that makes sense. 1992 was a brainfart. Sorry for that.
I learned BASIC in 1986. IIRC. In 1987 I learned assembler, because BASIC was too slow on the machines I had access to back then. And I was trying to get all the chips necessary to solder together my own Z80 machine. (That was east of the iron curtain, and you couldn't just buy those chips in a shop there.)
I don't remember any dates, but I do remember events that go way back. My earliest childhood memories are from when I was 2 years old. I know because I had a brother who died before I was 3, and I have two memories of him. I also remember one thing from when he wasn't yet born.
@StackedCrooked Actually I was far from Berlin back then, in the military, and it took me a while to get a few days off and visit the other part of Berlin.
@Mysticial This time of day I am usually asleep. (I have to be up in five hours, and will probably be in demand by my kids until 11pm today.) But I might have forgotten even if you said it when I was around. I am a programmer, after all, and we're not especially known for our incredible social competence.
I have a list of smart pointers where each pointer points to a separate Entity class.
std::list<std::unique_ptr<Entity>> m_entities;
I would like the constructor to handle the assigning of each pointer to a std::list class as it is "automatically" handled by the code on class instan...
Damn, what a mess. I had made some yeast dough in the evening, in preparation for the weekend (for rolls and pizza), and put it into the fridge in the biggest container I have. But it has since quadrupled in size (in thefridge!), burst the container, and spilled all over the fridge's content. Took me almost 10mins to clean up the mess. And I had to get another big container into the already cramped fridge, too, because I can't let this stuff lying around outside, lest it explodes.
:5446901 I have, In fact, the pizza dough recipe I have been using for a couple of months now should be in the fridge for at least 24hrs. (You can also leave it in the fridge for a few days.) It rises, but so far it's only done that very slowly.
@R.MartinhoFernandes Also, he's trying to push a unique_ptr<Boundary> into a std::list<std::unique_ptr<Entity>>. Doesn't mention any relationship between the 2 types of objects
@Ell Erm. It doesn't magically acquire more flour, you know. It only acquires more bubbles. And if it keeps expanding at that speed, I can't bake it fast enough to prevent it from taking over the apartment.
So, is the @ character a valid delimiter for a raw string literal? gcc is rejecting it
@sbi Good night
From the standard, for a raw string literal delimiter
any member of the basic source character set except:
space, the left parenthesis (, the right parenthesis ), the backslash \,
and the control characters representing horizontal tab,
vertical tab, form feed, and newline.
> 600 hours and thousands of dollars to move 500 balls nowhere in the most spectacularly inefficient way possible. So I can only assume that this was a government contract, correct? — Mike Newbry
@TonyTheLion If a magazine publishes a list of the sexiest women (alive, dead, or zombie), it's a fair guess that restricting them to saying things that were truly needed would put them out of business.
I'm passing a char** to a g_key_file_set_string_list which expects a const char * const identifier []
/* this function is part of the GLib library */
void g_key_file_set_string_list(GKeyFile *key_file,
const gchar *group_name,
const...
You know what really pisses me off? When people say that it's an attempt to suppress the minority vote to try and require proof of citizenship with ID at the voting booths. For FUCK SAKE! I call that preventing voter fraud and upholding the constitution. Dumb mother fucks!
Just read a story on the interwebs, needed to vent.
@R.MartinhoFernandes One thought is that one political party gets a lot of votes from people who are unable to prove they are citizens so this party doesn't want voter ID laws passed.
They are an instruction to the compiler to emit instructions that will cause branch prediction to favour the "likely" side of a jump instruction. This can be a big win, if the prediction is correct it means that the jump instruction is basically free and will take zero cycles. On the other hand i...
Like in this case, it has to parse the string, figure out that I'm asking for an integral and then evaluate. The first part where it parses the input isn't so bad but the latter that's not trivial
Hey guys, So i created a bot with simple mouse and keyboard functions that i made. I was thinking about taking my bot programming a bit further. I was wondering if i can make a C++ program to detect elements/pictures on the screen and act accordingly to it?