Naturally, he thought it was a Graham Cracker.
Naturally, he thought it was a Graham Cracker.
Was this from the Night of the Comet movie?
This song was the absolute bomb to play on drums in Rock Band. I really loved the snare / bass drum flow with the hats.
video-sizes
I’m confused as to your meaning here. Current codecs are miles ahead of what we had in the past. Unless you mean typical resolution (eg. 4k, 8k, etc).
For the purposes of OPs problem (P v NP), it considers not particular solutions, but general algorithmic approaches. Thus, we consider things as either Hard (exponential time, by size of input), or Easy (only polynomial time, by size of input).
A number of important problems fall into this general class of Hard problems: Sudoku, Traveling Salesman, Bin Packing, etc. These all have initial setups where solving them takes exponential time.
On the other hand, as an example of an easy problem, consider sorting a list of numbers. It’s really easy to determine if a lost is sorted, and it’s always relatively fast/easy to sort the list, no matter what setup it had initially.
While the orb weavers and Argiope spiders are certainly a shock, it’s really the Brown Huntsman spiders (American version of the classic Clock Spider) that can instill that fight or flight response when they run at’chya. I love spiders to death and always enjoy saving them from my house, but the first time I saw one of those guys in my apartment, my legs absolutely turned to jello.
Dinosaur birds, eh? Maybe Sandhill Cranes – those things are awesome and so cool in person.
Coincidentally, I do work on embedded devices, but as mentioned by ferret, most embedded stuff nowadays is (I think?) an Arm variant. Most all of the device code I write is C++ though; no need to get into assembly land unless clang screws something up, but that hasn’t happened yet thankfully. That said, in the future, this may change as we optimize certain imaging algorithms further.
Proficient: Rust, C++, Python, x86-64 ASM, SSE1 SIMD, C#, C, Javascript / Node.JS
Can get by: Java / JNI, Kotlin, Bash
Been a while: Perl, Haskell, Prolog, Labview, Lisp
I usually play clerics (busted good), but for my current campaign I’m playing a human fighter, and it’s a ton of fun. “What’s your character do?” “Charges into the fray, naturally”
Rather fun to play a character that’s a foil for my typically conservative & trepidatious teammates.
This is all too complex for me.
An absolute classic that I watch every single time. Kamelåså!
I don’t have the source with me, but I recall a paper about listening to various languages under different signal/ noise thresholds. If I recall correctly, languages like German that have multiple declensions were about to better able to parse noisy samples because of the redundant information. Sorry for not having the source off hand though.
Unable to narrow it down to a particular episode right now on this device, but it’s Polygon’s old Unraveled series. Always featuring BDG at his peak.
Not even mad; that looks fantastic!
We accidentally bought a small jar of bread & butter pickles at our house, and even with 6 people, it took forever to get through them. Absolutely none wanted them.
It is - without the quiet zone, it makes detecting the locator pattern really difficult, especially in one’s looking for the 1:1:3:1:1 ratio.