They are there every day, either the catfish are not as dangerous as the video makes them out to be, or I don't know.
You don't give toys to soldiers just to make them win their battles, but also to raise their morale and make them move into dangerous areas.
What I really wonder about is the reason that the pigeons don't move elsewhere.
Is hygiene so important for them?
Have they become oblivious to dangers by constantly exposing themselves to them (just look how close they come to humans in the city)?
Or do pigeons who became smart by escaping (there is one such in the video) lead the other unknowing pigeons there for sport?
Is it a mating ritual where the brave get all the girls?
Well in Java, there is RuntimeExceptions (meant to propagate up to the user, who can give it to support) and Exceptions.
You can handle Exceptions you can't handle by rethrowing them as a RuntimeException. RuntimeExceptions also do not need to be declared in the function signature.
Not that I do that often, I'm busy with PHP, where the exception handling is usually done like "Hey, you broke it!".
Ravensburger is a German company, so any English word is considered to be sufficiently exotic to be trademarked.
Remember that when the USA pushes next time for harmonization and enforcement of trademark laws in other countries.
.. enough said
Well, that is what happened in Fukushima Daichi 1.
All reactors switched off in reaction to the Earthquake.
Then the tsunami took the diesels out.
If they had a reactor that was up, and that was rigged to supply energy to the others, no meltdowns would have happened.
So, reading the article, a simulation lattice imposes a limit on the amount of energy that can be simulated.
Now some physicists wonder whether there is such a limit.
Well, look no more, we already know the limit because there are black holes, which effectively are a set of nodes in the lattice that are overworked and slow down time near themselves.
The only question is whether it applies to all kinds of energy, but since it applies to light, I guess the answer is yes.
There are many applications and games written in C/C++ that I love.
I also occasionally code in C - sometimes it is fun to use pointers and read/write files without chaining two or three objects.
There are however huge drawbacks to using C/C++.
There is surely a full list somewhere, but for me currently the not-buying-point is the preprocessor.
The preprocessor allows conditional compilation of any file. Sometimes the file might do that, sometimes something different.
This means that it isn't practical to have pre-compiled modules (although I guess you could go the route of splitting your project into dozens of libraries).
Thus, a very small file can require Gigabytes of memory to compile, because all the dependencies have to be pulled in, and represented in memory.
C is cool for learning how things work, but not good for making things work.
I found some bugs documenting my own code lately, but I think that only works if you write the documentation a month or so after you wrote the code.
If they had a 3D chat client and game in 1995, which contains portions of the patent (which was filed in 1999),
they essentially made their own prior art.
IANAL either, but AFAIK you had 1 year in the US during which you could file a patent after its technology went public, and in Europe you had to file the patent before you made you technology public.
There is some logic about reasoning about low-probability events here:
http://web.archive.org/web/20110712221603/http://thedeadobserver.hostwebs.com/
cool if you know the hotkeys, useless otherwise
Administration: An ingenious abstraction in politics, designed to receive the kicks and cuffs due to the premier or president. -- Ambrose Bierce