@NathanOliver Weeds aren't @rene's relatives. He's a pretty flower deserving to keep.
My point is that we don't need sophisticated chemical stuff or complicated procedures to burninate such tags raising their sprouts at a beginning.
@MichaelDodd I am not that sure, that dandelions really should be gone. There's much to get from them. Let's start with salad made from young dandelion is really delicious, over the flowering phase is a pretty spectacle, and last not but least children love to play with it blowing the seeds off when it's ripe.
@tripleee Daylight savings in the UK has ended, so we're back to GMT/UTC. But I normally need to be be in bed before midnight, if I want to stand any chance of getting up at a decent time the next day
@πάνταῥεῖ I remember when I was a much, much younger puppy, one of my neighbours use to give me 50 pence for spending an hour or so picking Dandelions so they could make wine from 'em...
@πάνταῥεῖ Consider this: It's far more likely that a person would learn to ask better questions and listen to advice in the future, if they receive advice, act on it, and get rewarded for doing a good job listening.
@πάνταῥεῖ I think it'd be a good idea to not keep along this line and go talk a walk before you end up putting yourself in a position where you're made to take one
@NathanOliver Sure, but it's irritating to compile and run code, and find it just sits waiting for input. I mean, it's easier even for the asker to code-in the values they are using..
@πάνταῥεῖ You're entitled to your own opinion. Helping someone figure out thier logic mistake is a valid thing to do though. Yeah it is not a great question but it helps someone, and may help someone else.
@gunr2171 oh.... so I've been doing it wrong then? :p
Always found it odd that humans have those things... it's always like there's another puppy at the other end that's mimicking me and barks at me when I do at it...
@JonClements Sightseeing as a start; never been to Switzerland outside a 10 hour stay at CERN. The position they're interviewing me for is a PhD position, where the candidate is supposed to make an image of the interior of the planet Mars
@Adriaan I think ThiefMaster works at CERN... I should probably bug him at some point about getting "access" to the place only someone internal could manage... asides from that though, I'm curious to what "an image of the interior of the planet Mars" is :)
@JonClements I was at CERN as part of a course; one of my profs runs the LCHb experiment. The idea for the PhD research is to make a map of the conductivity or Mars, based on data provided satellites measuring the EM field around the planet. From that conductivity they hope to infer knowledge of the interior, such as whether there's liquid water somewhre
@NathanOliver seen that; been playing that for years!
@Adriaan haven't we though from satellites and land rovers determined that water did exist/does exist? Or am I confusing fact with being an avid scifi novel reader?
@NathanOliver I'd have thought (and while I say that only having a reasonable amount of Physics/Chemistry behind me) - water as a liquid can't exist given the properties of it and the temperature of mars?
@JonClements it can, since it's one of two well-known materials that have a higher density as a liquid than as a solid (pure iron being the other one), thus pack enough ice together, and the bottom will show pressure-induced liquefaction. This is the same principle that allows Glaciers to move so fast
So water on the surface of Mars will most likely not be possible, but below the surface it might very well exist, especially in the polar regions where ice-caps are present
and water has that really weird thing if I remember correctly where at 4C it's the most "dense" but at 0C it's ice and almost considered a solid (or something like that)
That's jogged a few memories - thanks for the link...
also explains why you can "super heat" pure water in a microwave and it doesn't "boil" per se, but as soon as you tap it/put a spoon in it/disturb it otherwise, say goodbye to your microwave
@Compass I'm not sure about that one... my old cat use to cough 'em up and study it for a moment and then seem to decide "oh - I should probably start eating that"... and then did that death stare when you rushed over and picked it up and threw it in the bin
@JonClements Yes - there was a recent spam answer on it and a particular individual had voted "looks ok" on it. It turns out that they ALWAYS vote that way, even on obvious non-answers and link-only answers.
(I know for a casual user it probably doesn't matter what browser you use or that you even care as long as you open the page and have a couple of tabs open... .but when you normally operate having 20/30 tabs open at the same time... memory usage does get somewhat stupid)
Normal browsing for me typically includes one to three browser windows open, with one or two having a couple dozen tabs split between them, and then the third browser window often just has youtube or netflix playing on its own
Opera 12-style tab groups would be great for Firefox to adopt...
How best to edit this question? They've posted most of their self-answer in the question, but to remove that much text would reduce it to a "how do I do this?" off-topic question, effectively removing the MCVE
@NathanOliver Carrier swarms were practically unstoppable; my go-to was usually goon swarms in SC1 though, much faster to max out on goons than Carriers
In SC2 Carrier swarms were replaced with Void Rays
eventually they were nuked but are still crazy powerful
@JonClements Impressive! I would follow the battle reports on battle.net quite closely. I loved those things
These days... I think it was last year... I played it with a mate of mine in coop mode against the AI and err... I was spending a lot of time realising that I had to right-click on something, and then remembering how the heck I assign units into groups... and then trying to remember the tech tree... and... blah blah blah
20 odd years ago, use to be able to just do that without thinking, flick between units and bases, get one thing moving at one place, flick back to another etc...
probably also use to help that I knew most of the maps and had a good idea of where the other teams would be
plus some of the other folks I played against would have a certain strategy... so if we went for random, I got terran and they got zerg, I just knew that'd try a rush (and why not - it's cheap but gets you quickly large amounts of the map shown)
I'm not sure how you could ever win one of those unless you were playing 7 abject beginners...
Even three or four players with only a hundred PVP games each under their belt should be able to beat a top ranked player if they are on a team against him... let alone seven
I'm convinced they must have never played as a team before... it's not hard to strategize against one player when you have the resources (and APM) of 8 players...
Was it truly 7 v 1 or FFA with them all happening to go after you? I know in SC1 you didn't have shared vision by default even in 7v1, but still, every team game I played in SC1 started with teammates declaring position and strategy in team chat, e.g. "top mid, rushing mutas"
The best times were when the other teams inadvertently gave away their strategies in all chat, didn't last long though before it started being exploited and people lied intentionally in all chat to throw people off
@MichaelDodd While you are permitted to post cv-pls requests for burninations, we'd appreciate it be done only for those questions which need to be handled quickly (e.g. standard criteria, or things like the Q has 4 CV that are going to start aging away soon). For burninations, there are several people in the room that either filter the CV queue on the tag, or specifically seed the CV queue (so others can filter effectively). Thus, most of the time a cv-pls is not needed for burninations.
Basically, it's much more effective to post a reminder about the burnination asking people to filter the CVQ on the tag. If you do post a reminder, be sure to provide a link to the filtered CV queue (like the one in the pinned burnination message in the starboard) to make it easy for people to filter. Also, please don't post more than one reminder a day (well, maybe two that cover different timezones). Posting multiple reminders just starts to annoy people, which is counterproductive.
@FrustratedEveryday For requests like that, we use a format that allows others to find the requests and scripts to both present the requests to people and archive them when they are complete. The basic format is [tag:cv-pls] close reason https://stackoverflow.com/q/12345. Please see: How and why do I need to format my cv-pls (and other requests)?. I'd suggest reading the complete SOCVR FAQ.
I just spent most of a day diagnosing a problem with someone elses entire project code as a "mcve", only to find that the problem was caused by a third party library that was only used for one basically irrelevant portion of the code.
@TinyGiant I once spent 6 hours diagnosing code, only to finally realize it was two transposed arguments. Why it worked as written so long, but failed only there, I will never know
user4639281
@Makyen Don't know why I let myself get drawn into these things
@TinyGiant It's easy to have happen, which has pluses and minuses. The mindset that is fairly common for programmers/engineers is see problem->fix. We also tend to have the ability to focus on problems/issues/tasks for long periods of time, often without really noticing time passing. These tendencies, and others, often result in us being (a bit) too task-focused, and make it easy for us to get drawn into working on problems.