Comment Re:Wait, these are for real? (Score 1) 72
What do you mean by a stable star anyway?
What do you mean by a stable star anyway?
I just love the 4k TV trend.
Those rich people parting with their money now will finance a cheap very good quality set of computer monitors for me in just a few years.
Python have some problems with I/O being allowed only in ASCII or Unicode on some circunstances, depending on your version. It also has some problems with composing codepoints, lengths, encode translations, and other of that stuff that nobody does right.
Yet, Python has the most comprehensive support for Unicode of any language that I looked out, outside of C/C++. (Beats Perl 5 in any day. I don't know about 6.) It's just that no language has complete support (except for C/C++, that properly ignores the entire issue).
Can any language do unicode right yet?
You can throw away any language that uses UTF-16 right from the start. What's left is C/C++, if you are careful enough.
you can give a type to an arbitrary pointer, and do strongly typed enums that way?
Strongly typed... C... Those things do not belong in the same sentence.
The point is probably that there must be some behaviour, and it's better to define it. Thus, they defined. I hightly doubt it has any practical application, besides minimizing the damage in case of some kind of error.
But yeah, it's amusing.
From the GNU C manual (in the section about bit fields):
You can also specify a bit field of size 0, which indicates that subsequent bit fields not further bit fields should be packed into the unit containing the previous bit field. This is likewise not generally useful.
I guess now I have a new favorite C feature... Well, as soon as I actually understand what this means.
Also, GCC accepts empty structs, and they use no memory! I should look at the C specs more often.
Really, even if you are completely ignorant about it, it does not take much more than a short reading to see how simpler IPv6 is. That's why it corrects so many issues.
The problem with IPX style local names assignment is in security. Doing it in the open, wild Internet is a certain way to destroy it. The nearest option that's actualy usable is dynamic DNS, and it's quite widspread.
I just decided to upgrade my 2011 computers, so I got out to searching what improved.
Changed the heat sinks, fans, and casing. Also, changed the power supply of one of them. Nothing else was worth it.
A high resolution display is on my list, but it's still too expensive, so I'm waiting...
What happened to Slashdot lately?
There's a xkcd for that: http://xkcd.com/1104/
"Administrative operations" is everything a governemnt does.
What about just not allowing passwords to connect from a network? Is it too simple, or what?
It's simply stupid to prohibit robots from connecting. It means you'll never be able to automate your work. It's also not viable to lock the system, as it'll turn any bot anywhere into a severe DoS attak. And trying to discern intent from behaviour is way too hard a task for a computer.
You can't change the referential during calculations. Not on Classical Mechanics, because referentials can not accelerate, and in general relativity things are much more complex. Thus, no, it does not take the same amount of energy to accelerate from 0 to 10mph as it does from 90 to 100mph.
What may help you is realising that classical mechanics do not hold for acelerating referentials. And, yes, the added energy varies with the choosen referential.
You're not talking a huge difference in speed at that point...
Are you aware that the kinetic energy is proportional to the SQUARE of the speed, right? There is a huge difference in safety - much bigger than between 40MPH and 70MPH.
You know, in a imaginary future where machines outcompete humans in every task, and no job is available for more humans to perform anymore, all those problems you cited just go away.
"Religion is something left over from the infancy of our intelligence, it will fade away as we adopt reason and science as our guidelines." -- Bertrand Russell