You can get it inter-library-loaned from St Gallen or Chur to e.g. ETH library (or, for 6CHF more, via mail to you directly).
@PawelK IMO the reason we sometimes (imo too rarely in general) celebrate discoveries is so that we keep noticing that they were important and nontrivial, even after they've become part of the expected environment in the same way sewers are.
@delroth I'm unsure if what you are pointing at are names (btw. https://twisted.org/documents/16.1.1/core/specifications/banana.html and https://opensource.apple.com/source/ChatServer/ChatServer-37.1/libraries/Twisted-1.3.0/doc/api/twisted.spread.jelly.html seem to explain them) or that someone _inherits_ from a somewhat kitchensinky class.
When electronics importer Cara Leon goes missing, private investigator Sam Mujrif is hired by her sister to investigate. Cara is 8 times taller than Sam, but evidence soon points to players much smaller than either of them.
As Sam and his cross-scale colleagues pursue the case, it becomes apparent that Cara’s disappearance is linked to technology with the potential to reshape their whole society, and radically alter the balance of power between the scales.
A friend was driving me back from new year's boardgames and on the way we've encountered a swan strolling on the roadway of a bridge. (The swan was alone, appeared completely fine, and was AFAICT fully adult: its body was ~1m tall, its head was at ~1.5m and its plumage was fully white.)
I was surprised in many ways:
- did the swan walk there or land there?
- is there some obvious reason why a swan would want to be on a bridge (my friend's hypothesis was that that swan might have been doing that semi-regularly and just been surprised by ~nonzero traffic at that time of night there)?
- do swans stroll? I don't recall seeing a swan more than a few meters away from water (other than a flying one).
@Gigawatt121 Can this be reduced by holding it in your mouth? I thought that caffeine is absorbed via the mucous membranes too.
So, they are celebrating metrology and the ability to measure that time period.
Thanks, using only local means to determine when the end of the year (for whichever definition thereof) happens seems like a nice idea for a way to celebrate it.
And, I presume, it was about _live_ chlorella doing that?
They might actually differ, due to different ways in which people learn to brush their teeth. Some countries have kindergartens teach kids how to take care of their teeth (IIUC including how to use a toothbrush effectively), so then the way they brush their teeth will be more uniform and will change more quickly over time compared with places where kids are taught that only by the parents.
@alex I think some people have a different worry: they worry that ability to search becomes trivial to acquire, so low-effort trolls will use it too. I don't buy that reasoning either (because very few people request that their posts not be indexed by web search engines, so they are often searchable that way already), but it's a different one than the one you're responding to.
@AlliFlowers @TransitBiker @TechConnectify @sass
Sadly(?), I'm nearly a dozen megameters away.
@AlliFlowers @TransitBiker @TechConnectify @sass
The issue I'm trying to point out is not solved at all by courtesy. Courtesy doesn't make others' behaviour more predictable (in fact often it makes it less predictable). Clear rules that can be evaluated by every participant usually do.
Sadly, we actually want both lanes to move forward (so "lane A always has priority" doesn't really work) and "every second car is from a different lane unless one lane is empty" is not easy to evaluate (because the other lane being empty is poorly defined and because this requires drivers to keep track of which lane goes now).
Ah, I forgot that terminals have an internal buffer and are usually ready for writing ^^*
(So, steady state is "terminal and socket available for writing, neither available for reading", so we'll be continuously asking to wait for the socket to become readable.)
Sorry for the confusion, you were right.
@TransitBiker @TechConnectify @AlliFlowers @sass
Or use dynamic signage to change the lane which has priority every so often.
The symmetric variant creates a confusing situation sadly, where no one has right of way, so each single merge is a more confusing negotiation than it is today.
@retr0id You probably know that A-to-C cables work well (incl. support for some but not all power negotiation setups).
@grrrr_shark I started thinking a few days ago that having self-operated automation that looks at recent posts of someone and tells you e.g. how often they respond to responses or some similar simplish statistics would (a) be sometimes useful (b) be a thing that might be worthwhile for ~everyone here to have (esp. if there was a smattering of similar but not identical setups like that)
If we treat polling that could be interrupted by a read as a read, then (a) is fixed. (b) is obviously a problem, just like the hack that stdio understands that one might expect an input on stdin as a response to output on stdout.
IOW it's a hack, like the stdio thing and arguably like Nagle.
@isomer @sgf @danderson @nyquildotorg
That's a very weird way of doing that IMO. Once you learn that there's data to be read from the socket, but the protocol handler doesn't want more data now:
- you can't read it, because it's a remotely-triggered out-of-memory DoS,
- you need to unset the "wake on read available" flag in the subsequent polls so they don't immediately return and keep track of "this socket has some data available".
So why set the "wait on read available" flag until the protocol handler is in a state in which it's waiting for data?
@isomer @sgf @danderson @nyquildotorg
> * Most applications were single threaded and you couldn't tell when to reasonably flush (other than flushing on every write).
Wouldn't flushing on every _read_ be the reasonable thing to do?
I enjoy things around information theory (and data compression), complexity theory (and cryptography), read hard scifi, currently work on weird ML (we'll see how it goes), am somewhat literal minded and have approximate knowledge of random things. I like when statements have truth values, and when things can be described simply (which is not exactly the same as shortly) and yet have interesting properties.
I live in the largest city of Switzerland (and yet have cow and sheep pastures and a swimmable lake within a few hundred meters of my place :)). I speak Polish, English, German, and can understand simple Swiss German and French.
If in doubt, please err on the side of being direct with me. I very much appreciate when people tell me that I'm being inaccurate. I think that satisfying people's curiosity is the most important thing I could be doing (and usually enjoy doing it). I am normally terse in my writing and would appreciate requests to verbosify.
I appreciate it if my grammar or style is corrected (in any of the languages I use here).