Created after the Coding Help category, this is for other serious requests for help that don't fit in there (or any other subcategories that may be created.)
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@lolwhat said in Mobile for CH and DE?:
@loopback0 said in Mobile for CH and DE?:
I assume you're looking at getting an eSIM rather than a physical SIM?
I'm good with either.
A physical SIM from Three would need activating in the UK. An eSIM should activate outside of the UK but it might be worth checking with Three.
@Tsaukpaetra said in The Official Status Thread:
@dkf said in The Official Status Thread:
General Relativity adds in the fact that gravity is indistinguishable from acceleration, AIUI. It wasn't a Physics 101 level course...
Wait, is it not...?,!
Second year. SR was first term of first year, along with the logical tools for partial differential equations and other stuff like that. (Second term was more about quantum mechanics.)
@HardwareGeek said in Killed by Google:
@hungrier said in Killed by Google:
@Arantor
Super fund
Google's misconfiguration was so bad that it left the whole area full of hazardous material that requires a long-term response from the EPA?
Google's normal configuration does that.
Yes. But in this case, "Super Fund" means something different:
UniSuper is an Australian superannuation fund that provides superannuation services to employees of Australia's higher education and research sector. The fund has over 615,000 members and A$124 billion in funds under management, as of 30 June 2023.
Apparently, "superannuation service" is the Australian term for "pension".
@GuyWhoKilledBear said in The official unpopular opinions thread:
Also, ask me in the
ask me in the garage sounds like high school when somebody threatened you to a fight after school hours
@Luhmann said in The Beer Topic:
what chemicals should be present in food to improve it's perceived taste quality.
Did we already talk about their use of Spot
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtqbk9pgPXw
@Arantor said in WTF is happening with Windows 11? And nothing else:
@dcon is Vivaldi above their threshold, or is it too small to even make the “we care so little about it, we don’t even care to tell you that we don’t care about it” cut?
Too small.
Supported Browsers
@TimeBandit said in Microsoft Edge now doomed:
ChakraCore now OpenSource, will be ported to Linux.
Everybody knows that OpenSource software is crap, and everything on Linux is junk, so Edge is doomed.
Better keep using IE 11
I was thinking wait, doesn't Edge already runs on Linux? took me a while to see how old this thread is
@HardwareGeek said in Sportsball WTF:
Slightly OT: Sport, but not involving balls (at least the sport is not played with balls; no speculation with the competitors).
Aneesh / May 5
“F1 is a little more expensive than NASCAR”: Ryan Ellis takes a savage jibe at Miami GP food prices
Xfinity Series driver Ryan Ellis has taken a dig at the exorbitant food prices set by the Hard Rock Stadium Cafe as the Miami Grand Prix returned to its third edition at the Miami International Autodr
The cheapest item on the F1 menu: $120. Something to get @Polygeekery riled up: $560 for a bottle of Jack.
On one hand, those prices are stupid. On the other hand, the Hard Rock Beach Club is listed as a "Premium Experience" on the F1 event's website. While I wouldn't expect a NASCAR VIP suite's menu to have prices that sky-high, I wouldn't expect them to have $2 beers either. (I also doubt very many NASCAR tracks have a nightclub with pool and whatnot.)
@Carnage said in Is it a duck or a rabbit?:
@Tsaukpaetra said in Is it a duck or a rabbit?:
@error said in Is it a duck or a rabbit?:
There's no red
Thanks for explaining, I was wondering if there was a statement about dithering or something.
Have one based on a related (not not the same) phenomena.
Am I supposed to see red in that picture?
I think you have to stare at this one for a while then look away
Also voice calls stopped working in both the browser version and the Facebook mobile app. Either we can't hear each other, or we can but the ringtone is still going infinitely. Although maybe it is related to the fact that I stopped using Messenger apps when this EU requirement happened.
@topspin said in In other news today...:
@Applied-Mediocrity said in In other news today...:
What did all the dumb fucks involved - on both sides! - thought was going to happen?
@Polygeekery said in Neighbors are TR:
try not to be fucking retarded about rooms or meals that you charge to me.
Terrible news for anyone that wanted a pound of steak and pint of beer in a 200 ft² flat
@sockpuppet7 Yes, but I wanted something slightly different. See, you can tell it to use four columns and it will flow over four columns, but it will still be height that it extends as necessary to fit the content. Which is fine if the content does fit on the screen, but when it does not, it means you are scrolling down to read the first column, then back up to the next one and that's not so fine.
There are basically two ways out:
break the content into sections that are short enough to fit the screen, then lay each into columns separately, or
extend the page to the side by adding more columns instead.
The reading view in Word does the later—it shows the pages side-by-side, two or three fit on the screen and scrolling shifts the pages by one, so is a horizontal scroll. But people are not used to horizontal scrolling on the web, so web mostly uses the first method of breaking it down to sufficiently short sections. Or punting and accepting the bad scrolling.
@ixvedeusi said in TIL (about the Dark Arts of HTML):
otherwise it would have to muck around with the function body (or worse, the call site).
Not saying it couldn't be done, but it wouldn't be as straight-forward and the way it actually works makes sense to me.
But that's already what it is doing at that exact moment. It's saying here's a function which has this name, these parameters with these names (which are basically part of the call signature because of named arguments), etc., and it has the following "text" as code. Besides syntax, the function isn't evaluated, so why should default arguments be evaluated at that point? The code to execute them might as well be stored along with the other information that make up the function.
@PotatoEngineer said in Drug prohibition:
@boomzilla about fucking time! Almost every state had some flavor of pot-permission laws, and it's a crying shame that marijuana remained on the "there is no possible medical benefit" list in the DEA. I'd be interested in watching a documentary of why it remained Schedule I for so long. Was some specific leader an anti-pot person? Was it bureaucratic inertia? DEA putting pressure on the FDA so it could keep doing civil forfeiture?
Also, yes. It's generally good business, keeps pesky minorities in jail, profits go right back to the arms industry and bribes, what's not to like?
@Arantor yeah...was just reading this bit, which hits those points:
Rust is the type of language where wanting to do a new type of upgrade might lead you down a path of refactoring all of the systems, and many would even say "that's great, now my code is much better and can accommodate so many more things!!!". It sounds like a very convincing argument, one that I've heard many times, and one that has also caused me to waste a lot of time chasing down solutions to the wrong problems.
A more flexible language would allow the game developer to immediately implement the new feature in a hacky way, and then play the game, test it and see if the feature is actually fun, and potentially do a bunch of these iterations in a short amount of time. By the time the Rust developer is finished with their refactoring, the C++/C#/Java/JavaScript developer has implemented many different gameplay features, played the game a bunch and tried them all out, and has a better understanding of which direction should their game be taking.
And I can definitely see his point. I often do that sort of thing, even in not-game-development. Then throw some things away and maybe start over if it was actually too ugly and the Final Solution actually sparks some ideas about how to do it better.
@loopback0 said in In other hostile takeover Tweets...:
they're really more involved in Twitter than their profile suggests.
Is that supposed to be in indication of legitimacy or a red flag?
Filed under: Yes
@BernieTheBernie said in Pay peanuts or chicken feed:
How many Indian "sofwtare specialists" would be willing to take software job abroad
The point isn't to pay foreigners a reasonable wage, no matter how the "Fachkräftemangel" talk makes you believe that. The point is to drive the price down with the alternatives of not paying well here or outsourcing because you "can't find anyone" here.
@PotatoEngineer said in The Fox Ideas Thread:
@accalia That reminds me of Lackadaisy Cats, which is about cats rather than foxes, but is definitely about illegal activity during Prohibition.
(Mind you, progress on that comic has come to a screeching halt now that the creator is working on an animated series for the comic.)
That's that I was thinking of but couldn't remember the name!
@error said in Another AI based art generator, DALL-E Mini:
@sockpuppet7 Is she falling to her death? Seems oddly dark.
https://youtu.be/nwhSOwoiz-A?t=13
@kazitor
I knew there was at least one such logo that I was semi-familiar with, but couldn't put my finger on it. Thanks!
Now I'm pretty sure there are other(s), based on how many close-but-not-quite matches any search for e.g. "square logo" returns, including a lot of stock images (so basically "hey business owner without any graphical skills, here's simple stuff you could use"). Any other suggestions?
@boomzilla
Voyager 1's distance from Earth complicates the troubleshooting effort. The one-way travel time for a radio signal to reach Voyager 1 from Earth is about 22.5 hours, meaning it takes roughly 45 hours for engineers on the ground to learn how the spacecraft responded to their commands.
"Hey! Get back to work!"
"Debugging!"
"Oh. Carry on."
@Arantor said in Is updating dependencies frequently still good advice?:
@boomzilla said in Is updating dependencies frequently still good advice?:
@Arantor said in Is updating dependencies frequently still good advice?:
@Jaime considering that I’m writing the app in PHP and got this shit foisted on me in passing, no.
It’s a web app. It has web shit on the front of it. Which means I’m fucking doomed, forever, to deal with this clusterfuck of an ecosystem because every fucking thing in it relies on Node even when it’s not a Node app.
Meh. No ISVM report, no problem!
I did wonder at first what the International Society for Viruses of Microorganisms had to do with it - plenty of packages in the ecosystem qualify as microorganisms.
Then I remembered the IT version, and left myself a note to run npm audit on Monday to see if my ecosystem has gotten a vulnerability this week.
What are we going to do today, @Arantor?
The same thing we do every Monday, Dashie.
Oh boy, checking npm for vulnerability reports!
I checked out of this conversation a while ago, but since it still seems to be going, I'll just drop this link I've bumped into without further context:
Visitor and multiple dispatch via C# 'dynamic'
@BernieTheBernie said in Windows Server?:
@loopback0 said in Windows Server?:
Azure only has Enterprise IIRC but standalone it's the same control over updates as Pro unless Azure forces them.
Actually none.
In order to control updates, the machine must be in a domain.
I do not have a domain, so...
You can edit "local" group policy (which is what I believe you're referring to) without being joined to a domain in all editions from Pro up.
I'm using TypeScript, where the enums are just a combined object of name-to-number and number-to-name. The implementation looks vaguely like this:
ServerEnum = {
0: "FirstServer",
1: "SecondServer",
"FirstServer": 0,
"SecondServer": 1
}
And I'm using an enum as the key in an object. And it's really convenient a lot of the time, because I have one of those enum values hanging around most of the time.
{
[ServerEnum.FirstServer]: {...},
[ServerEnum.SecondServer]: {...}
}
It's great, except in two cases:
Object.keys(), Object.values(), and Object.entries() will all return a string key, so my enum value of 1 gets coerced into "1".
I also end up sticking that enum into the URL, where it should be the string-value rather than the number-value.
So for 1), I'm using parseInt(enumThing) as ServerEnum in my iterators.
And for 2), I'm doing a lot of ServerEnum[enumAsNumber] and ServerEnum[enumAsString]. I should probably switch from Object to Map, but , and Map's iteration API is a bit uglier.
Mar 27
Rescued 'baby hedgehog' turns out to be a pom pom from a hat - UPI.com
A Cheshire, England, woman rescued what she believed to be an abandoned baby hedgehog and took it to a local animal hospital, where veterinarians told her she had actually rescued the pom pom from a beanie hat.
@dkf said in India:
@BernieTheBernie said in India:
Many needful doers from India work in the IT industry in Western countries. But India is starting to experience a shortage of IT workers.
heise online / Mar 24
Missing Link: India's Software Brain Drain Turns the Tide to Talent Shortage
From India’s own digital rise to new visa dynamics to a huge demand for talent by Big Tech – there are many levers pulling IT professionals back to India.
Looking forward to ny times to come.
They probably really mean that they're short of people willing to do that much work over that many hours a day for that little money...
Sounds ripe for a gig economy startup!
@anonymous234 said in Nintendo plans on selling the same games AGAIN:
@LB_ Selling old games is a very good thing. Hell, now that digital purchases exist I'd say that there's no reason to ever stop selling a game. We've gotten too used to the absurd idea that software has to be on sale for a few years and then disappear forever. Remakes are great too (if there's a demand, why wouldn't you adapt things to newer hardware?).
What's not great is: 1. Having to buy a particular machine to run a particular game, and 2. Having to pay for the same game more than once. We need to switch to a model where once you buy a game, it's associated to your account and you own it forever and can play it on any device (within technical limitations). When Nintendo figures that out, then I'll start paying for my games.
(hell, they don't even sell the same games for the 3DS and WiiU virtual consoles, even though they all run on the same emulators).
some Xbox 360 games would be associated with my account if I had bought an Xbox one after it broke. too little, but at least they moved in the right direction
@The_Quiet_One said in You won't agree with me. And that's normal.:
Well, that just means if it's in the park, then it's not being used on a road, therefore it's fine!
And there are no such things as off-road vehicles.