@AdrianGheorghe Welcome to the JavaScript chat! Please review the room 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.
lol on the map all you see is a 3x3 grid. When other players get near you, you "hear" them (apparently everybody is blind af) so it calculates the direction and passes you a compass bearing to tell you "I HEARD YOU SON, IMMA EAT YOU"
More players on a tile = more noise, so a greater bearing to those near you
So if humans setup camp on a tile and try to fortify it, it's easier for a zombie to find them
The Phobos monolith is a large rock on the surface of Mars's moon Phobos. It is a boulder about 85 m (279 ft) across. A monolith is a geological feature consisting of a single massive piece of rock. Monoliths also occur naturally on Earth, but it has been suggested that the Phobos monolith may be a piece of impact ejecta. The monolith is a bright object near Stickney crater, described as a "building sized" boulder, which casts a prominent shadow. It was discovered by Efrain Palermo, who did extensive surveys of Martian probe imagery, and later confirmed by Lan Fleming, an imaging sub-contractor...
@copy and @ssube helped with that. copy wrote a nifty line of code to translate a proximity value into bearing, and ssube wrote some spankin code to calculate the proximity and get the "distance" in tiles
when i was looking into sockets and webrtc stuff i remember reading that anything sub foo seconds is considered instant to humans i cant remember what it was though!?
Blinking is a semi-autonomic rapid closing of the eyelid. A single blink is determined by the forceful closing of the eyelid or inactivation of the levator palpebrea superioris and the activation of the orbicularis oculi, not the full open and close. It is an essential function of the eye that helps spread tears across and remove irritants from the surface of the cornea and conjunctiva.
Blinking may have other functions since it occurs more often than necessary just to keep the eye lubricated. Researchers think blinking may help us disengage our attention; following blink onset, cortical activity...
I have to imagine there is some chance involved in that one
@ErikMcFarland yea but those still touch on completely different situations
> What I remember learning was that any latency of more than 1/10th of a second (100ms) for the appearance of letters after typing them begins to negatively impact productivity (you instinctively slow down, less sure you have typed correctly, for example), but that below that level of latency productivity is essentially flat.
@OliverSalzburg I expect it to run less than 2ms if Chrome optimised away the loop, and that Chrome haven't had time to optimise the code before it finish running.
@SterlingArcher The little insects will love you for that. Imagine the tiny sauce droplets flinging around everytime you fork up a pile of spaghetti...
@SterlingArcher If not roaches then mites and bacteria. But I live in a dense city and there is no avoiding roaches. Once in a while a scout will climb in, find nothing to eat, and die of thirst.
@david Main web techs are like that now. ECMA-262, WHATWG-HTML (commonly known as HTML5.x), and CSS3 are all living/expanding standards. (There is no CSS4.)
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