@KendallFrey ok so any law that isn't about how the federal government operates, or guaranteeing a freedom is generally an intentional misuse of the commerce clause by the federal government
the commerce clause is part of one amendment that says the feds can intervene when an issue effects the commerce between two or more states.
and instead of it being used to stop things like the "War of Toledo" as it was originally intended to do, it's used to micromanage states
You'd have, say 70% are very liberal in a state. if they decided 99% of their own policies in their state, how happy would they be about their political actualization?
@KendallFrey So here is my question: 70% of people in a region are liberal. 99% of their law is decided locally. How could you best calculate their political happiness with this information?
According to what I understand you're doing, each person is 100% their own political opinion, so if each person decides 100% of their own laws, everyone is 100% happy, which makes no sense
@KendallFrey I'm not saying that at all. Because this is a conversation about law systems, not a purely mathematical discussion with a continuous graph
@KendallFrey no, but I'll explain the next part if you understand what I mean... well sort of but I'm making a critical assumption, but this is the basic logic
so say I am (even though that isn't realistic) say I am counting it that way in a perfect world or maybe even in like a class room setting or microcosm of some sort
@KendallFrey Do you agree that most people who participate in politics pejoratively agree with one side as an authority? Like we usually assume that if you are pro-abortion, then you're probably for some sort of gun control, correct?
@KendallFrey ok, so you're saying that in a situation where a law is formed, the person that wants the law a certain way that they are more pleased when the law is the way they want it?
I mean for me this is so simple and basic-law-of-natureish that I'm having a hard time breaking it down anymore than that
@KendallFrey ok, pro-choice. I get it confused
@KendallFrey OK, so last thing I'm going to try to express here: people vote because they want to be governed in a certain way, correct or not correct? and if not correct, then how is it incorrect in your opinion?
@KendallFrey ok, but that makes more assumptions about a very specific circumstance than I think we should get into for an overall view of society
@KendallFrey good, ok, then I can say this:
the larger percentage I can effect change on, the more my vote counts, and thus the more likely I am to have greater overall laws effecting me
and mathematically this means that the higher percentage of laws I decide locally, the more I'm likely to have a higher percentage of laws I agree to that govern me
so say 70% in an area are liberal and agree on a set of ideas
I think this is distracting, and I'd just reference you to the Saudi journalist and all of the prisoners of DRNK that make international headlines all the time
@KendallFrey well I can tell you it's a bad idea and that's why the people in charge (who know much more than both of us) form interpol forces of local effected countries and not imperialistic invasion forces.
@KendallFrey my point is, why would you need to bring someone in from another country if your country agrees with it?
@rlemon to be honest, I'm not arguing against some international law. I'm just arguing that it always has to be enforced by local authorities. This is a well established fact
sure. I'm just saying that on a smaller scale we can see it (mostly) working out. also that if you're both trying to convince eachother of an opinion, it is, by definition, an argument.
@DavidKamer For the same reason you "need" to bring in the FBI for major criminal investigation in your city, even though the city agrees with federal law
@KendallFrey my only argument is that, if you belong to a community (the only people who vote in that area), then you are generally happier when you can make more choices more locally
Hey JS Family, can someone lend a quick helping hand with an issue I am facing right now with npm. It's driving me nuts! stackoverflow.com/questions/52901696/…
@KendallFrey they might not think so if they feel like they're only doing it because your country has superior force. People are rebellious by nature, and if they don't feel like it's their choice then a significant number of the population will undermine it just because it doesn't feel like a choice
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wow, you have taught me something awesome today lol. I don't code/look at code 24/7 like my betters, so I appreciate it when I'm taught something like that. Thank you @PatrickRoberts
@PatrickRoberts I mostly do JavaScript all the time. I don't really have a need for C or C# rn, but I do want to make a game in Unity and I will need to do C# for that...
At work I write firmware for embedded systems, and the C# is for desktop applications that communicate with those embedded systems usually using either USB serial or TCP/IP
oh, I actually really enjoy working with low-level software. Learning about how microcontrollers interact on the hardware level with peripherals is really interesting to me.
@PatrickRoberts I'd actually probably prefer doing something like that, but that's not what the remote/freelancer game is about. "they" (I realize how paranoid that sounds) have for some reason decided you should only work on firmware if you clock in 9-5
My company has really flexible hours. With a few minor restrictions, basically all they care is that I get in 80 hours every two weeks at reasonable hours of the day
I spend a fair amount of time soldering PCBs to fix hardware issues, using oscilloscopes and multimeters at the office for debugging devices when the software debugger isn't sufficient for determining the problem, and several other things that require my physical presence. That's just not an option, really.
so basically I'm imagining a screen and a ticket system and a guy waiting for you to tell him to restart/plugin something. One phone call a week with each engineer and 5 grand a year less for every employee to pay for the new guy. Now you don't have hours and instead can just get your work done in however long it takes (it'll be less than 40 hours a week)
@PatrickRoberts oh, yeah, definitely not an option for that stuff
@PatrickRoberts I was thinking you were designing drivers or something like that. Like taking something already made, like a router, and then updating and/or maintaining the firmware
or taking a chipset and then designing firmware for a specific task
like what companies do when they have a set of boards they want to tailor to use as something more specific from it's previous use case
well we actually have two departments at our company that encompass embedded systems, the electrical engineers and the software engineers. Even though all the software engineers (myself included) have electrical engineering degrees, they focus on writing applications and firmware, while the EEs focus on the stuff you just said
wait maybe I misread what you said. The EEs design the PCBs and figure out what hardware is needed for the client specifications. After the boards are fabricated, the SEs write the firmware for them to do the thing
@PatrickRoberts yeah... don't let any of that code get to production lol
but see if you're acting partly as an EE then you would need to be at the "shop" or whatever you guys call it.
I mean I guess if you're doing hardware debugging too, but I'd still think 60-70% could be done at home
I'm a big advocate for remote work. I like the whole "put your money where your mouth is" part of it too when it comes to the whole climate change debate. I don't want to hear a single person who believes in climate change say that a software guy should have to commute... ever...
Well one of the really interesting projects I worked on this year required me to write an SWD programmer for STM32 microcontrollers that ran on an LPC board controlling the test fixture. I think that's the most time I ever spent using an oscilloscope to debug software. Had to check the signal responses from the STM32 over the wire to find out if it was understanding the signals it was being sent, and if the data timing was correct.
@PatrickRoberts yeah you need to be there for stuff like that... Unless you had appropriate network enabled test equipment. A single setup at the beginning of the week and boom you're ready to go.
I don't know if there is anything out there that does that, but I'm sure that you'd have the skills to use some JS and C to design something like that
Writing all the software to make that possible for each project would sure be eating a lot of hours that could be spent just coming in and doing the work like normal. I'm pretty sure that would be wasting money, not saving it.
electronics.stackexchange.com/q/391098/76672 btw, here was a self-answered question I did for the SWD programmer. Funnily enough, writing the question was what helped me figure out the answer.
yeah I really don't know how feasible making a general purpose tool for that is as I've never personally used one
to be entirely honest a lot of embedded systems complication seems self imposed to begin with lol
embedded Java is a good example of how something so complicated can be forced into a standard
It seems that a lot of the problems are due to a lack of standardization, but I'm the first to admit that I have very limited knowledge on the realities of the field
but if you're doing something where it's basically an analogue signal converted to digital, that's where it would get complicated
@PatrickRoberts I was just about to say that it wouldn't be an issue as long as there was some sort of standard way of dealing with it lol
well this was a great chat, and it's cool to see a computer engineer likes writing stuff in JavaScript! I've got to got to sleep. Have a wonderful night/day whatever it is for you!!
@KamilSolecki The real questions are a. can you still test your code, and b. is the flow and object graph still easily understood
The first is easy to reason about. If all of your dependees are declared openly (in the constructor, or in method arguments), then it is easily testable.
Since the hardest part of a test is construction the portion of the world you want to test.
The second one is more subtle, and has to do with the API of the auto-wiring and how your code looks afterwards
Is there a place where the object graph can be seen? Is that place accessible from the app's entrypoint?
are you sugesting they have their own video codecs that mp4s avis and the lot are converted into?
okay, I saw that you can get the youtube website source (ctrl+u) and using find, look for url= and tag=\\u0026 and in between is the URL of the video in different resolutions, simply decode the url and voila, but I get a 403 error