I finally got a water pump; I wanted to do a "pull" on the radiator, but there wasn't enough space for all three fans cause the front of the case top curves down, so one of the fans is pushing air underneath
on top of that: got new RAM yesterday and I've gotta start learning to overclock
also I need to tell nvidia to piss off cause it keeps making the Windows logon take forever
the car is cheap because it's old and underrated, both the cars I own have this going on. Yet when I drive either of them everybody is interested "wow I didn't know that.." well bad luck cause I gave the underdogs a try
I saw some video today that opened up with somebody squirting way too much thermal paste onto their CPU.....the suicide rate went up after that part of the video went live
@mr5 btw you can buy decent running cars here for appr 500 euro, drive at least one year without trouble. Usually they don't have any km on them but they are cheap solely because old
I disagree. Mobile forces you to think about what you prioritize. It makes you use the screen space in a clever way. That doesn't mean that the desktop variant shouldn't enhance itself to introduce more information, different navigation, etc.
Well it's hard to pick one or another. If you want to do something that works on all platforms, my mindset is developing first for the platform that has most restrictions, and then improve upon the concept
If it was the first day to use the app, I'd rather miss on this super cool screen mode for 4k displays instead of being completely unable to use on phone, since my super cool 4k and downgrade scenario didn't foresee the issues I'd be facing later down the road
like what do you mean this 1400x900 widget doesn't resize?
it was critical to the overall experience to have it on screen at all times
boom, design went to shit
then again, I agree with Lee that doing this will implicitly mean that desktop will be gimped.
this is like a classroom, you have to make it so you can appeal to everyone, push down quality to meet the expectations of the idiotic bully, but quick enough so you don't make the smarter kids lose patience.
right but you don't design stuff that is exclusive to one platform on day one if your intent is to make it compatible with all platforms
the design should be built from the bottom up for compliance
and upgrades should be made from the top down, to make sure the top platforms can make the best use out of them
I have no idea how to handle this infinite loop (stupid fintech shit) and my boss, who is the only one who understand how these things are supposed to work, is at a wedding today.
@V.7 It's not exactly like that. I have a bunch of different financial records, and a set of functions that can be applied to each of them to get a certain output. Some of those functions require getting the output of other records. Obviously when that happens I'm filtering out the record that's currently being calculated, but I'm not sure what it's supposed to do when the infinite loop keeps alternating between two different records.
@Hypersapien My last message was a joke. It's not an actual meaning/recursive loop ... or did I misunderstand you?
bb o/ ^
@Harry Sleep helps. At least ... here. Although ... there's so little a big projects which compile at least enough time to see a dream ... or at least ... close eyes ... one eye. Other time ... we're coding.
plus COVID might actually hit it here soon since there was a case in Chicago, which is like "the big city" around these parts, not including Indianapolis, which is just a major highway intersection
Professor Laurence J. Peter wrote The Peter Principle in 1968 as satire critical of management and management practices. Over time, cynical folks latched onto it as a universal law of nature. Here’s how Professor Peter stated the law he named after himself,
@Freerey I think my girlfriend feels like that. I work an hour longer than her (she works 8h in the kindergarten, I 8h+break as a dev), and I have been very busy with my personal Blazor project lately. I love her very much though.
Also I get my overtime paid out (if I don't take it as extra vacation), so I often work longer.
I have a utility static class with functions handling various collections. Is it possible to write copy-free static methods in it ?
the caller method will just pass the reference of the collection object. After processing, the static class method will return the reference of the same collection.
@Wietlol ah thats what i wanted to understand.The overhead of copying multiple list<t> and back and forth between a utility. Reading & manipulating each item from the list vs using the reference of the list to do the same.