@Ffisegydd You might not need to invest too much money, if you can experiment/learn on the free tier. Though, that's what I tried to do, and I goofed up and got charged $5 anyway.
Their interface doesn't make it very obvious, when you're viewing your active instances, that you're only viewing one availability zone at a time, and you have to switch between zones - so I had two instances running when I thought I had only one.
By the time I got the billing alert that I had exceeded $0, the extra instance had run for about 300 hours (doing precisely nothing, because it was the first instance I created, which I then couldn't find and assumed had been deallocated)
@Kevin: and unfortunately an answer which perpetuates the myth that there are some primitive types which behave differently from non-primitive (imprimitive?) ones.
@AdamSmith I'm in the same boat there, really - I repurposed an old laptop as a home server and have exposed it to the greater internet a couple times just to test things out but I don't think it can handle any significant demands in terms of traffic and uptime, so I've stuck to hosting plans
@Air traffic doesn't bother me so much, but spammers have ruined the mail relay system so most addresses designated consumer grade aren't allowed to serve as a relay
well-known issue with numpy if you have too many zeroes and not enough ones in your bitstream pipeline. Try unplugging your cat5, shaking it to let any errant bits fall out, then plugging it back in the other way round to reverse the polarity.
@JonClements: if you get a second, the comment section here could do with a bulk cleanup. It started reasonably productively but went off the rails. :-/
@JoeKington: ended a long conv. with someone new to Python's object model who was deeply confused about things. Came up with a dictionary-based analogy I might use in the future, though, so it wasn't a total loss.
Ah! Fun! Always good when you get reusable analogies out of things, though!
Oh, and now I see the chat conversation. I actually really like that dictionary analogy to explain how variable names are related to actual objects in Python. May have to borrow it at some point in the future!
TBH I'm not sure that allowing multiplication of lists was a good idea. It's relatively seldom useful (various bits of wizardry notwithstanding) and causes a fair bit of confusion.
Is @Air here? Or anyone else who knows golang? Trying to think through something w.r.t. static typing and my Python brain doesn't work that way
trying to compare the md5 hash of a file to the contents of a text file
the md5 hash is a byte slice, and I can read bytes from the text file and compare those, or I can use bufio to read the textfile into a string, type convert, and compare those instead
seems to me I should just compare the bytes, but maybe it doesn't work that way?
@Ffisegydd The developers of GIF wanted it pronounced that way: "Choosy developers choose GIF." Like the peanut butter, JIF. Pronouncing it with a hard "G" is non-canon.
My sister's computer is dying with Windows profile issues. I told her two days ago to back up the whopping 300MB of important documents... and she didn't. And now a simple restart isn't enough to get past the error. And she needs those documents within 10 minutes.
10 minutes is doable, I guess: yank the drive, put it in a case, mount it on another machine. Not something you'd be able to talk a nontechie through over the phone, though.
One of the reasons I keep a linux distro on my physical keychain. Never know when a machine's OS is going to flake out and I'm going to need to grab something from it without a screwdriver handy..
I need an action movie to keep me company tonight while I work one of my apps tonight. I like having silly movies in the background while I code for some reason.
I tried my "2 Linux distros 1 USB flash drive" method to at least get it to run some kind of OS, but it simply ignores the drive. I have it set to first priority, I even disabled the HDD OS option, but then it just says there's no OS. No USB port made it recognize the drive.
What kind of nonsense is this that I can't enter Safe Mode and I can't boot to Linux? These are the first steps of their respective solution paths.
My previous computer's power supply was at fault. It was funny because I had no idea what the problem was, took it to a repair store, and the most specific they could get was "it's either the motherboard, the CPU, or the RAM. That'll be $70."
Mine still worked for a while, so I turned off the machine and tried to clean up the best I could then booted it again and played a game for a couple hours
apparently soda got inside the AGP (yep!) slot and carmelized due to the heat.
The stick was one of those mechanic's stethoscope's; I was trying to find the noisy part. I don't know why I didn't at least cover it with something non-conductive.
The card I poked to death was a Radeon 8500 LE with 128 MB of RAM. It was a slightly underclocked version of the most power card on the market, but it was only $200.
New product idea: FunctionBar. "Tired of figuring out which function key to press for Safe Mode? With this this sleek rod, made out of durable ABS plastic, you can mash all of them at the same time with one simple press! It can also be used to discipline recalcitrant students! Buy now and we'll include a second one FREE! Just pay S&H."
Hi - have a look at the room rules up on the top right (sopython.com/chatroom). In particular - just ask your question - if someone can help they will.
I was promised a lunch, but I don't know what to think of that either. Would I be okay with doing it as a favor for a friend (the coworker is a cool guy)? Or should I charge them as a contractor at $200 an hour? Or should I see if I can help with just Teamviewer? They never taught this stuff in school. =\
I feel like saying "I don't mind checking it out if it's something simple, but you may want to look at hiring someone if it's something I Can't fix in an hour" is entirely appropriate
I actually have helped a friend with work stuff before, but he's my best friend, I had nothing to do with his workplace, and I got to keep the tip. But this person is a coworker first and a friend second, and we've only hung out outside of work once, and it was while I was employed.
And I don't think the company would be able to pay me; the whole reason I don't work there anymore is because they're poor. They actually had another round of layoffs a few weeks ago.