Good ol" BobbyB does not miss, thank the gods. Memes aside, his work is indeed phenomenal.
Good ol" BobbyB does not miss, thank the gods. Memes aside, his work is indeed phenomenal.
Man, Chuck Schuldiner’s early work sounded a lot different from the later years! (/s)
Was this from the Night of the Comet movie?
I’ve been playing Heart of the Machine, and really enjoying it. It’s a fascinating 4x ish in a future city, in a bit of an inversion of AI Wars (same developer). Before playing, I was merely intrigued, but now I’m excitedly awaiting where it goes. It was, however, initially difficult to figure out what to do. Perhaps more UX is going to be useful here.
What an adorable MoonMoon!
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).
I’ve been really enjoying it, even in its limited state. Jetpacks are a total game changer, and I love that the fuel lasts a long time. There’s still a few obvious QoL additions needed, especially with stuff like the cargo ships (gotta type the name in?!), but otherwise it’s got a really strong foundation. Also, elevators are amazing; just realized last night that one cam connect wire to the cab. Really excited to see how the game develops in the future (traaaaaains).
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.
That prick Richard Woolsey had a great character arc though!
I’d be curious to know what the difference in generated assembly was between the two. Would this affect things in a program without virtual classes?
100%. Just looking at the thumbnail had me singing it in my head. That said, there’s still a lot of great songs in it; e.g. Alan Cummings nails the opener.
Aww, was hoping for some insight on global variable initialization order. It’s something I’ve been curious about how different vendors order things with linking.
I don’t disagree at all there, however there’s an absolute glut of websites showing the bad way of doing things. For a person brand new to C++ though, I find it generally important to make a distinction, so one doesn’t pick up the first thing seen and learn bad habits.
C++ is great with many things, but a consistent build system is Definitely not one of them. Additionally to note, when doing CMake stuff, it’s generally best to stick to the modern way of doing things (targets, rather than a slew of global properties); it ends up being a lot easier to develop as projects grow and other dependencies are added.
This should be the Florida motto.
The Apollo Beach manatee viewing center is actually pretty great, TBH. I’ve seen sharks, sting rays & a myriad of other aquatic life, while just chilling on the pier. Not to mention the many dozens of adorable floating potato-cows. I’d recommend checking it out if one’s in the area during the cooler season.
This is all too complex for me.
For any not in the loop: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grigori_Perelman