• @[email protected]
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    610 months ago

    Well their heads aren’t on the tracks and they’re immortal, I bet we could rig some kind of device to make them total praplegics and then work on a direct neural interface so they can use computers while they lay there endlessly having their bodies painlessly trisected.

  • Ice
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    10 months ago

    Programmer asks: how many bits for the integer?

    At 32 bits it’s “just” a Thanos snap with extra pain

  • stinerman
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    1210 months ago

    Where I’m from Calc 2 is integrals. That wasn’t so terrible. It was Calc 3 (vectors and series) that was the hard one.

    • Kogasa
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      610 months ago

      At the universities I went to, Calc 2 was integration, sequences and series, then Calc 3 was multivariable. They really pack all the harder parts into 2.

      • stinerman
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        110 months ago

        We were on quarters, so we had calc 1-4. Makes sense that Calc 2 was rough if you were on semesters.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        I thought this was taught in high school. Curriculums differ drastically between countries, don’t they?

    • Codex
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      410 months ago

      I managed until university when I left calculus and entered “Linear Algebra” and man, I really don’t like matrices.

      • stinerman
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        410 months ago

        I made it through. My degree is actually in math. 15 years ago, I used to know what an abelian group is!

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        I found linear algebra super hard until I learned it a second and then third time, from different angles. I found it harder to understand when it was taught in a pure maths context, but coming at it from the applied side made me go “oh, so that’s why that’s like that”

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    I’d do top case since the number of people killed would converge to -1/12 meaning no suffering

  • @[email protected]
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    810 months ago

    Cant you just take people from the track with reincarnating people? They might have to die a couple of times, but thats nothing compared to infinity

  • @[email protected]
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    2210 months ago

    I go for option 1.

    In all programming languages that I know, integers have a maximum number. E.g., in C that’d be 2,147,483,647. After that, you would run into an overflow, resulting in either…

    • a crash (train stops, no more deaths),
    • death count suddenly turns negative (all people previously killed are suddenly alive again and even new people are generated out of nowhere) - until we reach the next overflow when people disappear and start dying again
    • or - if it’s an unsigned integer - death count resets everytime we reach the maximum limit

    So compared to option 2, we have a chance of stopping the death count. And even if the train keeps running, we have essentially option 2 but the same people only die very rarely. If we assume a cycle of 1 death per second and an integer boundary of 2,147,483,647, that’s just one death every 68 years per person involved. Seems more fair to me compared to 100 people constantly dying over and over again.

    • @[email protected]
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      610 months ago

      Or is it like a Y2K death trolly and when the overflow happens the universe doesn’t catch the exception and things get weird. Like suddenly any number can be divided by 0.

    • @[email protected]
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      510 months ago

      Yeah okay but by that logic you’d also have to quantize time and the suffering would end either way in a finite amount of time.

  • Kogasa
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    210 months ago

    It can be, usually for college credit though

  • @[email protected]
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    510 months ago

    Hell couldn’t be real because humans would eventually fetishize any pain input and dump buckets forever.

    Some webcomic I saw back in the earlier days of the Internet

    • Queen HawlSera
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      210 months ago

      Allegedly it isn’t a place where you are tortured, but instead a state of permanent depression from being cut off from God. Just the former is easier for pop culture to portray.