If I want to install Windows on, say, a Thinkpad X1 Carbon, I can buy it and install it. It includes numerous drivers. If there are necessary drivers missing, I can normally get them from the manufacturer, use the Add Hardware Wizard, and install them.
If I want to install Android 6.0 "Marshmallow" on, say, a Samsung Galaxy S Relay 4G, it's not so simple. True, I could (in theory) download and install some random Nexus ROM shipped by Google. But such a ROM includes far fewer drivers, and in fact may not boot at all. And there's no UI for downloading and installing signed drivers downloaded from hardware-manufacturer websites.
@mr5 Re. free hosting: I'm using awardspace.com for free Web and email hosting for my domain. I set it up long ago, and it works fine. I have a simple homepage (1 HTML file, no images), and I also use it for email forwarding to my Gmail.
It really is absolutely free. (I pay a different company for domain hosting.) The main catch, as I see it, is that IIRC paid companies offer more availability / uptime.
@TristanWiley Your experience (thinking in code) is probably common. Normally, when thinking about anything, I hear the words in my head. In English. But when I was studying French, some of those thoughts started coming in French instead.
hi Micer!
@McAdam331 Re. giving away stress: Would you pay people to take some?
Opus is a lossy audio coding format developed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) that is particularly suitable for interactive real-time applications over the Internet.
Opus incorporates technology from two other audio coding formats: the speech-oriented SILK and the low-latency CELT. Opus can be adjusted seamlessly between high and low bitrates, and internally, it transitions between linear predictive coding at lower bitrates and transform coding at higher bitrates (as well as a hybrid for a short overlap). Opus has a very low algorithmic delay (26.5 ms by default), which is a necessity...
for low bitrates it's awesome thing
so if you have original recordings, that's a reasonable thing to try
I normally won't beg for upvotes, you know me. But this is a special occasion: We are trying to get my question in the hot questions list. stackoverflow.com/q/33033235/508666
We (in the php room) would love your help
Also morning
And yes. That is a very long way to dump a friday link on main ;)
It's ok. You're all still cool. Whenever it is friday I just like to trick people into clicking ms black youtube videos. Because well... it's friday friday friday gotta get down on friday
if i could i would translate a crazy singer's friday song for all of you. it's basically a party trip around my country that starts with going to throw the garbage to the bin on a thursday's night.
yup. it's like , "where's my dev?" "why am i merging everything into the blue line when i'm clearly not?". internally /via console the commits show the real flow.
I have recently published app on play store, unfortunately by mistake I have selected different account for publishing and currently it's under app reviewing state. So is it possible to cancel that request or delete that app from wrong developer account ?
btw, eric, isn't it that when you create a branch you should also do a commit before it is shown on the diagram? and that is only locally -- then you have to do a push?
yet what i see when i merge in sourcetree is a continuous, unchanged, master blue line, making me thing that what sourcetree is doing is rebasing the shit out of my dev branch
not really, a rebase you undo your commits, play the missing commits on your branch, then reply your commits on your branch, it gives your branch another base
so, from a high level, they both conceptually do the same thing
The reason for that was that if it gets merged you see one commit that basically dumps everythign from the other branch into one branch and with rebase you see each commit individually. I forgot the details about it but it was something like that.
lets say 10 people are working in a code base, they are pushing into master constantly, if you merge masters changes in with your branch every day, you'll get a shit ton of merge commits
but if you rebase, you just give your branch a new base, no extra commit every day for every person
my coworker wrote me 8 steps to follow lol. This is on sourcetree 1) pull workingbranch 2) commit workingbranch 3) rebase workingbranch onto develop 4) push workingbranch 5) switch to develop 6) merge workingbranch into develop 7) push develop 8) switch back to workingbranch
Well, not everything is a straight line but most of it is. The last time someone merged was some dude that I don't even know (and we only work with 2 people on this project) merged my change into the develop branch and then the other time was on 2 september when I did something wrong haha
Commit: e47b662bad100b41e54b681a7a2d7b2e7bf58c7e [e47b662] Parents: c6478c380a Author: Eric Cugota <[email protected]> Date: 9 de octubre de 2015, 13:51:16 CEST Labels: HEAD origin/dev origin/cats dev cats
now cats are soft.
i don't know what i did
i just know that the branch cats just dissapeared.