Yups, I love the idea of LaTeX, LaTeX itself not so much.
I enabled it (quite intuitively) by clicking on the little cloud icon in Timeline. I didn’t need to go to settings.
Unfortunately because of the way Bitwarden works you should consider your passwords compromised when Bitwarden itself gets hacked - regardless of vault encryption. Especially if you ever used the web login. To access…
Looking at the comments and article, I almost feel like a freak for actually not minding going back to the office. My commute to the office is about a 10 mins walk - maybe that’s the difference with many others here.…
What? I would argue that unordered_map is nearly always a reasonable choice when in need of an unordered associative container. There is nothing particular wrong with it. Not sure what your rationale is for saying it’s…
CMake as a library with bindings for various scripting languages (e.g. Python) would make a lot of sense to me. Have the power of a proper scripting language and let the CMake library deal with generating the build…
If these private companies are anything like Serafe I can see why this referendum ended in a no.
This might have been a nice article to read. But after reading just the first paragraph I got unclosable overlay advertisements blocking out 80% of the screen making it impossible to continue reading. Seeing this more…
What are you talking about? They make a new type of content that is available on the internet searchable. That’s how Google started and got successful in the first place.
Yes, so the structure itself has padding (added by the compiler). But that is regardless of whether it is in an array or not. OP seemed to suggest that C arrays introduce padding of some sort, which they do not.
> possibly with padding What padding?
> There's no common official record on where someone lives in the US When a US colleague transferred from our US office to our European office they were surprised and a little shocked that they were required to register…
Shooting should not be the starting point of law enforcement. Shooting should be a last resort. Implying that looting indiscriminately means shooting is a call to violence.
Fair point. ‘Looting inevitably leads to innocent people getting shot’ is probably not what Trump meant.
Because the exact phrase has historical context [1] in a sense of: if you loot, we shoot. Clearly it wasn’t said in a sense of: looting inevitably leads to violence. That makes it sound like Trump used it in a similar…
This was an ultrasound machine. Philips would first have you import the data in their own QLab software and from there export a copy (which misses some of the data from the private fields). With GE reading the data was…
All manufacturers do this indeed. The “good” data is in the private fields that can only be read by the manufacturer’s proprietary software. The fields that are open for everyone usually have a lower quality version of…
> Youtube is more and more siding towards removing content. I wonder, can US regulators do something about it? A few weeks ago the discussion here was about how YouTube is not removing enough content (mostly in relation…
> too much extraction results in a acidic, heavy taste, too little extraction results in the dreaded "mud water" light taste It's actually the opposite. Over extraction results in more prominent bitter flavors and under…
For a van Gogh that would never work. No legitimate art dealer would touch it. Regardless of the amount of time in between.
Interesting fact is that Hendrik Lorentz, the Nobel prize winning physicist, did much of the calculations on how the tide would affect the structure. Based on his calculations the structure was moved to a spot were the…
Years ago Apple bought the company, PrimeSense, that developed the technology for the first generation Kinect (the one based on IR structured light). From the description Apple gave of FaceID during the keynote I'm…
>what you got was a bowl of plain steamed white rice, a bowl of vegetable soup, and a variety of cold pickles and sauces which you added to the rice (including a tube of really nice mild chili sauce which I've never…
Thank you. I seem to have completely missed all the VC blog posts about the bincompat decision with regard to Visual Studio "15"/2017. Glad to know that the VC100 to VC140 overhaul that I completed only very recently…
Does this also mean a new C/C++ runtime library is available (i.e. vcruntime150)?
Yups, I love the idea of LaTeX, LaTeX itself not so much.
I enabled it (quite intuitively) by clicking on the little cloud icon in Timeline. I didn’t need to go to settings.
Unfortunately because of the way Bitwarden works you should consider your passwords compromised when Bitwarden itself gets hacked - regardless of vault encryption. Especially if you ever used the web login. To access…
Looking at the comments and article, I almost feel like a freak for actually not minding going back to the office. My commute to the office is about a 10 mins walk - maybe that’s the difference with many others here.…
What? I would argue that unordered_map is nearly always a reasonable choice when in need of an unordered associative container. There is nothing particular wrong with it. Not sure what your rationale is for saying it’s…
CMake as a library with bindings for various scripting languages (e.g. Python) would make a lot of sense to me. Have the power of a proper scripting language and let the CMake library deal with generating the build…
If these private companies are anything like Serafe I can see why this referendum ended in a no.
This might have been a nice article to read. But after reading just the first paragraph I got unclosable overlay advertisements blocking out 80% of the screen making it impossible to continue reading. Seeing this more…
What are you talking about? They make a new type of content that is available on the internet searchable. That’s how Google started and got successful in the first place.
Yes, so the structure itself has padding (added by the compiler). But that is regardless of whether it is in an array or not. OP seemed to suggest that C arrays introduce padding of some sort, which they do not.
> possibly with padding What padding?
> There's no common official record on where someone lives in the US When a US colleague transferred from our US office to our European office they were surprised and a little shocked that they were required to register…
Shooting should not be the starting point of law enforcement. Shooting should be a last resort. Implying that looting indiscriminately means shooting is a call to violence.
Fair point. ‘Looting inevitably leads to innocent people getting shot’ is probably not what Trump meant.
Because the exact phrase has historical context [1] in a sense of: if you loot, we shoot. Clearly it wasn’t said in a sense of: looting inevitably leads to violence. That makes it sound like Trump used it in a similar…
This was an ultrasound machine. Philips would first have you import the data in their own QLab software and from there export a copy (which misses some of the data from the private fields). With GE reading the data was…
All manufacturers do this indeed. The “good” data is in the private fields that can only be read by the manufacturer’s proprietary software. The fields that are open for everyone usually have a lower quality version of…
> Youtube is more and more siding towards removing content. I wonder, can US regulators do something about it? A few weeks ago the discussion here was about how YouTube is not removing enough content (mostly in relation…
> too much extraction results in a acidic, heavy taste, too little extraction results in the dreaded "mud water" light taste It's actually the opposite. Over extraction results in more prominent bitter flavors and under…
For a van Gogh that would never work. No legitimate art dealer would touch it. Regardless of the amount of time in between.
Interesting fact is that Hendrik Lorentz, the Nobel prize winning physicist, did much of the calculations on how the tide would affect the structure. Based on his calculations the structure was moved to a spot were the…
Years ago Apple bought the company, PrimeSense, that developed the technology for the first generation Kinect (the one based on IR structured light). From the description Apple gave of FaceID during the keynote I'm…
>what you got was a bowl of plain steamed white rice, a bowl of vegetable soup, and a variety of cold pickles and sauces which you added to the rice (including a tube of really nice mild chili sauce which I've never…
Thank you. I seem to have completely missed all the VC blog posts about the bincompat decision with regard to Visual Studio "15"/2017. Glad to know that the VC100 to VC140 overhaul that I completed only very recently…
Does this also mean a new C/C++ runtime library is available (i.e. vcruntime150)?