I just had my first child and discovering the world with him has really been eye-opening to the “small things” again.
I just had my first child and discovering the world with him has really been eye-opening to the “small things” again.
I mean the parent comment mentioned tests…
You would also port the tests, right?
You might want to have a look at parkitect! Its an hommage to rct1/2 but in a modern 3d presentation
This might be a relevant starting point for you: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/trueskill-2-improved-bayesian-skill-rating-system/
IIRC some car batteries can be used that way, but it wears out the battery.
What’s a pedalo?
Get a USB c dock
But hardly for hot air balloons
So it’s a hollow half-shell
What you don’t get is a feeling for how common these failures occur though.
There’s an actual article on [remote coin-flipping] (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coin_flipping#Telecommunications)
Look, you’ve been out in the wild in the rain and then get a bit of hot canned cheeseburger, of course it’s going to taste great.
Ah, i think i misunderstood your comment.
In terms of archiving I agree, in terms of restoring a running copy from an archive, maybe not.
C code that reproduces a running binary on an up to date compiler is worse than a machine code binary for a legacy machine of which complete Emulation is not guaranteed?
Tel Aviv is not the only Israeli city…
And I never said that. It is the one with the most liberal international reputation though.
Thinking of the area in a classical rural-city divide doesn’t work anyways, because you don’t have the “lived in my village seen nothing else since 10 generations” families
The rural-city divide is not about people staying in the same place for generations, otherwise the us wouldn’t have one. It’s about progressive and traditional values. And Israel does have geographical differences in that regard.
Anything else?
So countries aren’t allowed to have differences between the city and the countryside? Same could be said about many western countries.
What about the title is clickbaity? There’s no “the answer is going to surprise you”, no surprised face in the thumbnail, no “you won’t believe what happened next”. The video examines the question in the title.
The relationship between a grad student and their professor is generally characterized by a profound power imbalance.