if you combine openstack (or vagrant, if you must) with a host running openvz and puppet configuration, you can spin up small containers that know what kind of machine they ought to be and install software by themselves
A bit of a question. I have a canvas, and I update pixels really fast (using the imageData). Then I use a putImageData to update the canvas again. Sometimes it looks like a bunch of pixels modifications (frames) aren't rendered, and are dropped. Is that.. possible?
Same car. I'm trying to figure out if it's worth fixing, and save money a few months before buying a sweet new whip, or just say fuck it not worth it and just buy a new car
I couldn't afford a car repair on my old salary. Now that I can, I have to make decisions
user1596138
I blew the motor on my Ranger finally.... I coulda had a new one put in for a grand but I bought my new truck instead said fuck it
I have expensive tastes lol I work hard, and my monthly expenses are pretty low. So this will be something nice I can afford, and still save money easily
user1596138
Yea we're in the same boat right now dude lol
user1596138
17:57
Single and young with high incomes low expenses
user1596138
I just didn't want to spend THAT much, I am eyeing the small size trucks with diesels coming in the next couple of years, that's when I'll buy a new one.
I had that at a bar once. Crossfit homeboy tried to make fun of me and steal a girl I was talking to, asked if I got my clothes for christmas. Drunk as fuck as I was, I picked up my tab, hers, and my brothers. Spent like $600 unfazed (oops)
Turns out he was a waiter and "knew" a bartender
I don't like to flash like that, but sometimes it's like, oohh i wanna crush this guys spirit
$.fn.drop_down().call($('.mutliple-select-dropdown')); will try to call the result of the $.fn.drop_down(); call. And I am sure this is not a function it returns.
But, since you use $.fn.drop_down you sould be able to : $('.mutliple-select-dropdown').drop_down()
Or your plugin is bad. Which is also more than possible, since it's a jQuery plugin
@roadtocode Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room pseudo-rules. Please don't ask if you can ask or if anyone's around; just ask your question, and if anyone's free and interested they'll help.
A promise is an object that represents a future value. It's a way of storing a handle to a pending async action so that you can compose it, decide what to do when the answer comes back, an error occurs, etc. see: html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/es6/promises
If you don't declare your variables locally, they will be global. So every time you will call the plugin it will modify the variables, that are global.
If you don't declare a variable with the var keyword, they will be considered globals
@LanaKane just talked to my dad, said it's more than likely not worth getting my car fixed. So it looks like I'll be getting a new car in the next couple weeks
Brendan Eich (/ˈaɪk/; born 1961) is an American technologist and creator of the JavaScript programming language. He co-founded the Mozilla project, the Mozilla Foundation and the Mozilla Corporation, and served as the Mozilla Corporation's chief technical officer and briefly its chief executive officer.
== Early lifeEdit ==
Brendan Eich received his bachelor's degree in mathematics and computer science at Santa Clara University. He received his master's degree in 1985 from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Eich started his career at Silicon Graphics, working for seven years ...
@Luggage Turing never implemented something, he talked about a theoretical model for computation. von Neumann built the first implementation of a Turing machine, which is actually a RAM machine.
the drama of the movie, i'm sure, is all made up, but the broad strokes of the machine and what they did, I think is, as accurate as you an get for a secret government project.
@SomeKittens It wasn't just brute force though, right? I mean, it can come to brute force in the end, but there's a major difference between iterating over one byte and iterating over 32 bytes
John von Neumann (/vɒn ˈnɔɪmən/; December 28, 1903 – February 8, 1957) was a Hungarian-American pure and applied mathematician, physicist, inventor, polymath, and polyglot. He made major contributions to a number of fields, including mathematics (foundations of mathematics, functional analysis, ergodic theory, geometry, topology, and numerical analysis), physics (quantum mechanics, hydrodynamics, and fluid dynamics), economics (game theory), computing (Von Neumann architecture, linear programming, self-replicating machines, stochastic computing), and statistics. He was a pioneer of the application...
He pretty much went into his basement one sunny day in the 50s, said "let's make a computation machine!", and out of a bunch of scrap invented the first computer, the model of which we use to this day.
He then said "fuck it, that's a crappy computational system, I'm gonna make another one!", but then he died of cancer...
@Luggage We haven't changed our modus operandi since the 50s: Our processing units are still assembly lines, quite literally. They're just faster, and we put more of them at once.
They're the stupidest pieces of fucks in this world, and while we have entire fields of CS devoted to alternatives (cellular automata for instance) we *still( do it
@JanDvorak Of course there are! There are several superior ways
user1596138
18:58
@SterlingArcher lol nice do it. I'm waiting to fix my Ranger so I can sell it and put a dent in my new truck's loan