They say he’s out standing in his field.
They say he’s out standing in his field.
Technically I guess the T1000 can be anyone… but yeah it’s really Robert Patrick.
macOS has something to this effect where if it detects too many kernel panics in a row on boot it will disable all kernel extensions on the next reboot and it pops up a message explaining this. I’ve had this happen to me when my GPU was slowly dying. It eventually did bite the dust on me, but it did let me get into the system a few times to get what I needed before it was kaput.
The contacts inside are too big and sensitive and it results in phantom inputs. The DIY fix is to open up the controller and literally cover parts of the input contacts with tape.
He’d get along well with Terrance Howard.
“What one programmer can do in one month, two programmers can do in two months.”
Exit codes from processes are damage points that you take against your HP. When your HP runs out, the distro reformats itself to a clean state.
The USA doesn’t do what the USA does for the USA, the USA does what the USA does because the USA is the USA.
Next you’ll be telling me that the stream rewinder I bought is a scam.
Presumably they’d do it with some kind of idle timeout. No inputs for X number of minutes and you get an ad.
Including the sleeve wrapping or it doesn’t count. No unwrapping. Eat all.
Learn to use git bisect
. If you have unit tests, which of course you should, it can save you so much time finding weird breakages.
This was the subject of a limited run comics series by Dark Horse called Robocop vs The Terminator that was pretty rad. It was written by Frank Miller or Sin City and The Dark Knight Rises fame who also wrote the script for Robocop 2. It kind of led to a video game as well. No idea what that was like but the comics were pretty decent as I recall.
Why do you think he’s so insistent on proper use of lotions?
That’s just ridiculous, goofy, supercilious, absurd, laughable, comical, ludicrous, chucklesome, and risible.
The IP holder at this point is Microsoft, so who knows. Microsoft has bought up a lot of big gaming outfits recently, so this is kind of new territory.
The code in the image is C or C++ or similar. In those languages and languages derived from them, curly braces are optional but the parentheses are required. It should be the other way around to avoid logic errors like this:
if (some expression)
doSomething()
else if (some other expression)
printf(“some debugging code that’s only here temporarily”);
doSomethingElse();
Based on the indentation you’d think that doSomethingElse
was only meant to run if the else if
condition was true, but because of the lack of braces and the printf
it actually happens regardless of either of the if
conditions. This can sometimes lead to logic errors and it doesn’t hold up to a principle of durability under edit — that is, inserting some code into the if
statement changes the outcome entirely because it changes the code path entirely, so the code is in a sense fragile to edits. If the curly braces were required instead of optional, this wouldn’t happen.
I have all of my linters set up to flag a lack of curly braces in these languages as an error because of this. It’s a topic that sometimes causes some debate, ‘cause some people will vociferously defend their right to not have the braces there for one liners and more compact code, but I have found that in general having them be required consistently has led to fewer issues than having arguments about their absence, but to each their own. I know many big projects that have the opposite stance or have other guidelines, but I just make ‘em required on my own projects or projects that I’m in charge of and be done with it.
Pretty much.
https://youtu.be/YlGCL8OvYr4?si=G8jj30iyB1G4QYpf