• @[email protected]
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    22 months ago

    Fish is superior to Bash and ZSH, I dont care that you can have auto completion on both its a pain to set up.

  • eightpix
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    52 months ago

    No year zero. Meaning: year 2000 is in the 20th c. and year 2100 is in the 21st c.

    M:I-3, 4, 5, and 6 are excellent movies. Each in their own right. I know, Tom Cruise. But, plug and play any action star, and these are still great movies. He just happened to land the role of Ethan Hunt back in '96.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      22 months ago

      Tim Cruise has something besides luck, you have to admit that by now. He landed that thing because he WANTED to land that thing.

      TC, he’s just like you and me. He puts his pants on one leg at a time.

      But after his pants are on he makes hit movies.

      • eightpix
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        12 months ago

        I mean, Com Truise defo had more than luck. He had pull even then. And, yes, he is just a person. He is dedicated to his art, which, I think, is running hard and making memorable movies.

        • Top Gun (1986, Dir. Tony Scott, Budget $15M),

        • Rain Man (1988, Dir. Barry Levinson, Budget $25M),

        • Days of Thunder (1990, Dir. Tony Scott, Wri. Robert Towne, Budget $60M),

        • A Few Good Men (1992, Dir. Rob Reiner, wri. Aaron Sorkin, Budget $40M),

        • the Firm (1993, Dir. Syndey Pollack, Budget $42M),

        • Interview with the Vampire (Dir. Neil Jordan, Wri. Anne Rice, Budget $60M),

        Big directors, writers, and big hit films. Then, he became Ethan Hunt.

        • Mission: Impossible 1 (Dir. Brian DePalma, Wri. Robert Towne, Budget $80M)

        M:I-2 (Dir. John Woo, Wri. Robert Towne) was thoroughly forgettable. That said, I just discovered that the writers of Star Trek: DS-9 and Voyager — Ronald D. Moore and Brannon Braga — wrote the story. Wild. Still, no quarter given. Until, maybe, I watch it again.

        The next 4 are great.

        • M:I-3 (Wri./Dir. J.J. Abrams with Alex Kurtzman (latter-day Star Trek writers and executive producers))

        • M:I-4, Ghost Protocol (Dir. Brad Bird (the Iron Giant and the Incredibles))

        • M:I-5, Rogue Nation (Wri./Dir. Christopher MacQuarrie (the Usual Suspects and the Way of the Gun))

        • M:I-6, Fallout (Wri./Dir. Christopher MacQuarrie)

        Jury is still out on M:I-7, Dead Reckoning Part 1, and Final Reckoning. Full disclosure, I did not really feel Part 1.

        Tron Cubes does attract/demand talent. And, his collaboration with Christopher MacQuarrie is long-standing.

      • eightpix
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        12 months ago

        There are 101 years in your question. So, no year zero then?

        Still fighting for command of this very small hill.

  • @[email protected]
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    162 months ago

    Thirteen months, 28 days each + one day. (Plus another day when there is a leap year).

    It would just work.

  • @[email protected]
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    272 months ago

    I live in a pretty mountainous area, but I can think of a couple blind corners on small hills near me. So probably the one on the way to the bakery while running or biking.

    But I do a lot of ski touring so I’d rather die on one of the big ones.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    Having devices require a USB-C charger might be great for small devices, but it’s awful for laptops. That thing is so flimsy it’s only a matter of time until it starts having faulty contacts. I’ve had one for a year and now it connects/disconnects everytime I touch the cable. Gimme back my huge Dell barrel jacks 😭 😭 😭

    • @[email protected]
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      132 months ago

      The main problem I have with USB-C is that the “U” is a lie. Always has been to some extent, but seems like it’s particularly true with USB-C. This is closer to that meme that’s like “There are 12 competing standards. We created a new universal standard to replace them all.” Except instead of there now being 13 competing standards, USB-C is a fractured mess so instead it’s like there’s now 20 competing standards. This cord supports passthrough power, this one doesn’t, but even the one that does only supports 20W so you have to have a special one to deliver 65, and that USB-C power brick only gives 15W, so you have to buy a special one that does 80W, and this USB-C port on my phone doesn’t support the USB-C to Aux jack adapter I bought, so now I have to buy a different adapter. It goes on and on and on and frankly I’m old and tired.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        The issue with that is the old cables had the same problem, they just were less noticeable because you didn’t expect them to do what the USB-C is capable of. I had some USB micro cables that would pass power only, and it drove me nuts if they ended up near my computer.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        After further reflection, the hill I’ll die on is that we should replace ALL types of USB by barrel jacks, not only USB-C. Cause circular connectors rule! Make a standard one, I don’t care, as long as I never have to plug a USB-A three times to find the right way.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      barrel jacks were great until you lost them and had to buy a new one for way too much money. but, I’d rather have a standardized barrel jack than usb c

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        yeah my problem is not with having a standard, but with choosing USB-C for it instead of something better.

        I get that USB-C was probably the more pragmatic choice since it already existed and a lot of devices were already using it. But I’m still team “Let’s make a new good standard rather than use one that’s just okayish”

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      I have also had issues with type C connection reliability, but every single time so far it has been an issue with the cable. I thought that the port on my phone of 4+ years was dying, the connection felt loose and it would charge unreliably, but changing out the cable has completely removed all issues.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        the connection felt loose and it would charge unreliably, but changing out the cable has completely removed all issues.

        Isn’t that because the attachments are placed on the cable side, purposefully, because changing cables is easier than replacing parts of the phone/device? I think that’s one of the more noticeable issues with the iIdiot lightning chargers: Once the grabbing parts of the port are borked in the device, no cable ever stays in.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      Grab a thin needle or piece of wire, thin enough to easily insert into the USB-C port, and scratch all of the dirt and lint out of it. Always point the needle towards the outer surface so you don’t scratch the electrical contacts in the middle.

      There is often a surprising amount of junk inside even if you can’t see it from the outside, and that can greatly affect the connection quality.

      My phone recently had a similar issue where it would only charge if the cable was inserted in a specific way, and any movement would cause it to stop charging. The cable also wasn’t really held well even though it looked like it was fully inserted. I cleaned out the port even though I couldn’t see anything inside, and managed to pull out a bit of dust anyway. And now my phone no longer has charging issues and holds on to the cable much better.

      USB-C unfortunately just seems to have a design that makes it very easy for dust to get stuck in it, while also having a relatively low tolerance for foreign material buildup before the connection quality gets affected, making this a quite common issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 months ago

        Thanks for the tip I’ll try that ! I’ve had the same problem on a tablet, but there it was definitely caused by the port being bend out of shape (it won’t be horizontal) so I had assumed it was the same problem on the laptop. But I’ll try cleaning it to see if it fixes it ! I assume a toothpick or something else or wood or plastic would be better than metal ?

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          A wooden toothpick is probably a bit too thick. You’d want something thin enough that it can be inserted without touching the electrical contacts. If you do have something plastic then that’s probably better, but if you do the cleaning when the device is off the USB port should be unpowered and there shouldn’t be a risk of causing a short, and modern USB ports are quite well protected again shorts anyway so it’s very unlikely to cause damage just by being conductive. You mainly want something that is long and thin enough to get all the way to the bottom of the port without having to apply any force. If the only things you have that are long and thin enough to reach the bottom of the port without having to be forced in are made of metal, then that’s still a safer option than jamming something too thick into the port that can deform the center contacts.

  • @[email protected]
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    41
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    2 months ago
    void main() {
        //code
    }
    

    Is better than

    void main()
    {
        //code
    }
    

    Why would you want to put it on a separate line? Are you paid by the height of the source file or something?

  • dandelion (she/her)
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    632 months ago

    All dates should be formatted according to ISO 8601 standard (YYYY-MM-DD).

    Months should be adjusted so September, October, November, and December are the 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th month respectively (so the literally meaning of the names accords with their actual meaning).

    Not cleaning your kitchen knife after sharpening is trashy and contaminates your food with metal shavings.

  • Salamander
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    222 months ago

    The split between “Today” and “Tomorrow” is at midnight, not when one sleeps/wakes up.

    This comes up often after midnight when my girlfriend asks me about “tomorrow”. Why discuss breakfast for tomorrow when we still haven’t had breakfast today??

    • @[email protected]
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      82 months ago

      I guess my hill is to fight you on this.

      They current day isnt over until you wake up, or the sun comes up

    • @[email protected]
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      42 months ago

      The Baha’is use sundown as the end/start point of the day, do with that information what you will

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      In the same breath, I hate when people tell you they want to meet in the morning, or call you, and then wait until 1130 hours. Fuck that shit. We need terms to describe portions of the morning just like we do for afternoon, evening, and night.

      I do get my evil grins on when they do that to me and then I call them at 0530 hours the next time we’re scheduled for ‘morning.’

    • @[email protected]
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      42 months ago

      If someone says “last night” when talking at 12:01AM, do you consider them to be talking about 1 minute ago?

      • Salamander
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        32 months ago

        I will know what they mean, but if I notice it is 12:01 I will absolutely take the opportunity to respond as if they meant 1 minute ago

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      You may want to ask a member of the cult of the subgenius the difference between “real” midnight and “conspiracy” midnight.

    • @[email protected]
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      102 months ago

      You’ll love TV advertising schedules. You can buy slots all the way up through 29:59:59

    • @[email protected]
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      142 months ago

      Some computer nerd friends and I came up with a solution for this:

      Computer architectures typically provide separate instructions for “logical” and “arithmetic” bit-shifts. The details as to why aren’t important, but we can borrow the nomenclature.

      When referring to “tomorrow” in the sense of “when I wake up from my next sleep cycle”, use “logical tomorrow”. When referring to “tomorrow” in the sense of “after midnight tonight”, use “arithmetic tomorrow” (or “chronological tomorrow”, if you really want to be pedantic).

      • Salamander
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        42 months ago

        Our relationship is built on tiny hills to die on. Of course, it is always playful 😜

        She will use a common grammatical construction in Spanish (“a por”) that became technically correct in Spain (where she is from) long after the conquest. I am from Mexico, where that construction is not used (we don’t insert the “a” before “por”). So, when she uses “a por” I act like I don’t understand and argue that it is not in the spanish her ancestors taught mine.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      Must disagree. If today ended at midnight, then my streak of watching at least one episode of a TV show every single day would have been broken years ago. No, today ends when I go to sleep, even if it’s at noon on what is your tomorrow

  • @[email protected]
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    42 months ago

    None. I rather change myself than wasting time on changing something that won’t last forever anyway.