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Just wait until v2...it will probably get you laid in the local singles bar.


Of course. Why would you expect anything but? Pride is actually a very good driver of change if you ask me because people often do their best work when they are proud of what they are building.


Perhaps ego is a better term. Concretely, why migrate hotmail from unix to Windows except due to ego? The NPV has to be negative here.


I find it almost completely mind boggling that with all the breathless new coverage on the "incredible shortage of qualified tower personnel", I have yet to hear even one mention of what I find to be the elephant in the room.

Uhhh...why not use AI to start controlling the airports and airplanes? Talk about an app that, to me at least, seems an almost trivial use of its abilities and I'm sure that an AI could be trained in a very short period of time that could outperform a roomful of overaged, distracted humans...right?

Yes of course there is no way I'm the first to think of this...but just the fact that here it is day 3 or so, and literally NOT ONE MENTION ANYWHERE in the media about the potential for AI to safely land and direct all these flying things.


Maybe because it'd be unwise to put an algorithm in control of human safety when it can't even tell that 9.9 is larger than 9.11?


Would you say handling air traffic control is easier than setting up a LAMP server?


Isn't the pain of installing Arch the point?


Some people might just like the rolling release model, huge software library through AUR and good documentarion.


Not at all. The point is to have a rolling release, up to date, mostly unpatched Linux distribution.


Well perhaps your a photon and then you certainly are both.


Uhhh....how does the screen show black?


The screen knows what color it displays at all times. It knows this because it knows what it doesn't. By subtracting what it does from what it doesn’t, or what it doesn’t from what it does (whichever is greater), it obtains a difference, or deviation. The controller board uses deviations to generate corrective commands to drive the display from a state where it does not display black to a state where it does, and arriving at a state where it displays black, it now doesn't display anything.


For the uninitiated: The Missile Knows Where It Is[1]

[1]: https://youtu.be/bZe5J8SVCYQ


There is also version for those already initiated [1].

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LjN3UclYzU


I’ve just broken out in a rash. Thanks.


Each of the pixels is actually a little shining eye which watches your every move. When the pixel’s eyelid closes, that pixel turns black. That’s why they call it putting a display “to sleep.”


I like your explanation, but to be fair, it depends.

Some displays are implemented with dual-eyelid technology for the blackest of blacks. Naturally, like all genius engineering, we see this in nature: cats.


It depends afaict. OLED screens have a per-pixel light, and they turn off pixels to make black. LCDs have a single large backlight and pixels that the light shines through and they can change color (but not turn off) so in that case they turn as opaque as possible, but don't completely block the light.


There is also things like microled. Which means that there is bunch of small(bigger than multiple pixels) lights that turn on and off as needed.


And in a CRT the electron beam turns off when scanning over a pixel.


Black pixels in an OLED still reflect some light so their are not completely black either.


What, you've never heard of a "black light" before? They just turn on the black sub-pixels.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blacklight


He said it, it is ultimately a turn off.


In case of a LCD, black pixel is turned ON to block backlight. It's clearly visible on monochrome LCD screens.

In case of e-paper, black pigment is attracted to the outer part of the screen.


Love the use of Playwright for the contest intel...I am currently using Playwright to redo some prior scraping projects and seeing real world examples such as these is a big help.

You attack the problem like blackjack card-counter would. You assess the rules, make mathematical odds projections when possible and logical ones when not, and keep a keen eye on what you are up against as to judge how to best attack the money.

Thanks for the smart write-up...its been a big inspiration for me.


ohhh I love your use of UNION to create a polymorphic-type ENTITY data structure. Nice work and design.

I still love futzing around in C...It was the original langauge I learned and God did I struggle with it for years. Like the OP mentioned, C is awesome because its such a concise language but you can go as deep as you like with it.

Thanks for all your efforts and the writeup...the game has a throwback Commander Keen-type vibe to it and I loved that franchise for a minute back in Carmack's pre-3D days.


You wouldn't believe the amount of crap I take whenever I introduce very basic version control at the various 3 to 6 man shops I find work at these days.

I'm 100% sure that once I left that the devs went back to remote server crash and burn FTP development...they couldn't be bothered with the "hassle" and unneeded headaches of git.


> I'm 100% sure that once I left that the devs went back to remote server crash and burn FTP development...they couldn't be bothered with the "hassle" and unneeded headaches of git.

Have you considered introducing Mercurial or even Subversion?

While Git may be a kind of an industry 'standard', if you're starting from zero, some of its concepts may be a bit mind-bending for folks, and it has often been commented that Hg seems to have a more beginner-friendly interface.

And if branching isn't going to be used (a large strength of git/hg), then Subversion may have an even simpler mental model (svn of course does branching, but the others are more optimized for it).

If folks are doing FTP-push deployment, then moving to 'just' SVN-push (commit) deployment can be an improvement.


There was a new hire who was told to make a small change in a piece of server software, found the repo, read the docs, made the change, ran it in testing, and pushed to prod. Cue the 'senior engineer' screaming bloody blue murder because he'd been directly monkeypatching the servers for 3 years with no vc and no backups.


That’s… not a senior engineer. Whatever his title may have been.


This could have been written and 2014 and 2004 (hi, it's me). There will always be people who don't use it and others who won't remember a time when they hadn't used it :P


Add 1984 to that list of dates. We used PVCS on MSDOS

By 1994 I had moved to other companies and a NeXT equivalent to svn with a good GUI - and then ClearCase.


Hello, fellow old person. I was just remembering PVCS (Polytron Version Control System) since it was the first I worked with back in the 80s. Now I see that it's still out there, with the latest release in 2021. Which is insane.


No...the REAL wildest part of this is that I am old enough to have sat in a Radio Shack window display and using a TRS-80 and TANDY-BASIC I believe it was (?), and actually saved and loaded my attempts at writing games using a off-the-shelf Radio Shack cassette drive and a funky interface cord

OMG the crazy headaches that setup gave me...of course if you didn't actually press PLAY on the unit at the right moment after you typed LOAD in BASIC, the thing would hang...and to be honest...it loaded so slow that it often seemed like it hung when it didnt, thereby AT LEAST quadrupling the fun (not).

One thing good did come of it...I never once cursed at 5 1/4 floppies as they were a godsend compared to the cassette drive days

...and while your at it, get THE HELL OFF MY LAWN!


Same here, though with a TI-99/4A. I never had a drive on that thing, so it was always on tape, complete with handwritten odometer counts on the insert card for reference.


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