Isn't the only difference between rotors, as defined in this article, and quaternions the sign of the second 3d component? And this only happens because the planes are defined as "xy", "xz" and "yz", rather than the…
Math on Wikipedia is just absolutely atrocious.
I mean, no, they didn't actually occur, that is the good part. That doesn't let Ross off the hook for attempting to make them occur.
Because there was no need to, the other charges were enough to put him away for life. There's really very little reason to doubt he did it, either.
If Bezos tried to have six people killed, then yeah, he should be in jail.
The cost is the countermeasure, by design.
So: Short a large amount of bitcoins, 51% attack until value plunges, earn massive amounts of money. Of course, the problem with this is that there is no exchange that you can trust enough to actually do this.
There are many more ways to make money off a 51% attack than just altering transactions.
> If a big crypto-community notices an attack, the cost of a 51% attack would rise Would it though, really? Why? On the contrary, someone performing a 51% attack can and will freeze out all other miners, leaving them…
WebGPU is a simpler API for doing modern rendering, with less tradeoff. OpenGL is not simple if you want to actually do useful things with it.
I mean, that is exactly what WebGPU is, so I am not understanding why you are so determined to complain about it.
And it became increasingly less of a good fit with each one. By now, it is ridiculously mismatched to the task it needs to perform. Just leave it to die.
Why would that make things better, rather than the fairly obvious "worse"?
What's so "surely" about it?
That API is under development, it is WebGPU.
OpenGL absolutely is a legacy API today. It has been an awful impedance mismatch to modern GPUs for about a decade now.
That will most likely be the already mentioned WebGPU.
OpenGL really is a legacy API in 2020. There is a massive mismatch between modern GPU design and the OpenGL API design. The only reason it wasn't left behind a decade ago is that there wasn't a decent replacement.…
This I/O device thing seems to be a feature of one specific wasm engine that just exposes a simple framebuffer, so, it has nothing to do with anything else.
Got it the second time.
It is definitely 100% gremlin: https://digg.com/2015/myers-briggs-secret-history Also, https://www.vox.com/2014/7/15/5881947/myers-briggs-personali...
Myers-Briggs is a proprietary test marketed by a commercial company. It is meant to extract money from corporate customers.
> The first big leap is considering experience to be a continuum from humans down to inorganic matter. Why is that a leap, while considering it to be discontinuous is not?
How does that make any sense?
Sure, those that have their own culture do exists, but a lot of times, it's not even that. It's a weird mindset, and it's definitely tied in to the toxic streak of white supremacy that runs through all of American…
Isn't the only difference between rotors, as defined in this article, and quaternions the sign of the second 3d component? And this only happens because the planes are defined as "xy", "xz" and "yz", rather than the…
Math on Wikipedia is just absolutely atrocious.
I mean, no, they didn't actually occur, that is the good part. That doesn't let Ross off the hook for attempting to make them occur.
Because there was no need to, the other charges were enough to put him away for life. There's really very little reason to doubt he did it, either.
If Bezos tried to have six people killed, then yeah, he should be in jail.
The cost is the countermeasure, by design.
So: Short a large amount of bitcoins, 51% attack until value plunges, earn massive amounts of money. Of course, the problem with this is that there is no exchange that you can trust enough to actually do this.
There are many more ways to make money off a 51% attack than just altering transactions.
> If a big crypto-community notices an attack, the cost of a 51% attack would rise Would it though, really? Why? On the contrary, someone performing a 51% attack can and will freeze out all other miners, leaving them…
WebGPU is a simpler API for doing modern rendering, with less tradeoff. OpenGL is not simple if you want to actually do useful things with it.
I mean, that is exactly what WebGPU is, so I am not understanding why you are so determined to complain about it.
And it became increasingly less of a good fit with each one. By now, it is ridiculously mismatched to the task it needs to perform. Just leave it to die.
Why would that make things better, rather than the fairly obvious "worse"?
What's so "surely" about it?
That API is under development, it is WebGPU.
OpenGL absolutely is a legacy API today. It has been an awful impedance mismatch to modern GPUs for about a decade now.
That will most likely be the already mentioned WebGPU.
OpenGL really is a legacy API in 2020. There is a massive mismatch between modern GPU design and the OpenGL API design. The only reason it wasn't left behind a decade ago is that there wasn't a decent replacement.…
This I/O device thing seems to be a feature of one specific wasm engine that just exposes a simple framebuffer, so, it has nothing to do with anything else.
Got it the second time.
It is definitely 100% gremlin: https://digg.com/2015/myers-briggs-secret-history Also, https://www.vox.com/2014/7/15/5881947/myers-briggs-personali...
Myers-Briggs is a proprietary test marketed by a commercial company. It is meant to extract money from corporate customers.
> The first big leap is considering experience to be a continuum from humans down to inorganic matter. Why is that a leap, while considering it to be discontinuous is not?
How does that make any sense?
Sure, those that have their own culture do exists, but a lot of times, it's not even that. It's a weird mindset, and it's definitely tied in to the toxic streak of white supremacy that runs through all of American…