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I really hope this is successful, it’s really got the spirit of what made the early internet great.
New account since lemmyrs.org went down, other @Deebster
s are available.
I really hope this is successful, it’s really got the spirit of what made the early internet great.
Nope, I was contrasting SG1 with Star Trek, which has filmed in the Bronson Canyon uncountable times (actually, I’m sure someone has counted).
Or the same old quarry with a different gel over the lens.
“Real-life Star Wars tech” confused me, since it’s a missile defense system IRL, but it’s talking about:
The massive screens and virtual set technology pioneered on more modern shows like The Mandalorian.
“Yes, it grew increasingly difficult and frustrating to go out into the woods of British Columbia and pretend it was another planet”
I quite liked the feel of the series being in woods so much, and it made sense given that many of those “worlds” were pre-industrial (plus alien tech).
It’s interesting that the author and most others went with 403, when 426 seems to be the most appropriate.
Neither are perfect matches, since 403 is about authentication and 426 is for Upgrade semantics (i.e. the upgrade is over the same transport protocol, not switching from http to https). npm isn’t sending an Upgrade header, which is required, but I think if it sent Upgrade: TLS/1.0, HTTP/1.1
then that would be claiming they supported TLS on port 80 (STARTTLS style) - possible but unconventional.
A fun article, and I really like the idea of pataphysics. I’ve klnown of SCP for a long time but I’ve never delved into it - it seems more bottomless than TVTropes, and I’ve spent/wasted enough time there already!
I was referring to this trivia:
Picard’s scene with Guinan was not in the original script. Melinda M. Snodgrass was told that they needed a “Ten-Forward” scene to accommodate Whoopi Goldberg coming in that week.
I took it as true, although I had a quick go at finding where this claim came from and am drawing a blank
I watched that one last night and had the same thought - she’s been the face of nonacceptance towards Data and although Bruce Maddox is far more extreme in his views it seemed like a waste of her character building.
That said, they’d already shoehorned in a Guinan scene so I don’t know where they’d find the time.
Picard gets pegged? I clearly missed the TNG After Dark episodes.
Lisp variants like Clojure are being used for new projects (e.g. Logseq) but I’d be surprised to hear of anyone choosing COBOL for a greenfield project.
I wasn’t saying that unit tests replaces readability, I was saying that back in the 60s they’d reason and debug using their brains (and maybe pen and paper), with more use of things like formal proofs for correctness. Now that we write more complicated programs in more powerful environments, it’s rare to do this (we’d use breakpoints, unit tests, fuzzing, etc).
For such an influential letter, I don’t find his arguement all that compelling. I agree that not using go to
will often lead to better structured (and more maintainable) programs, but I don’t find his metric of “indexable process progress” to satisfyingly explain why that is.
Perhaps it’s because at that time people would be running the programs in their heads before submitting them for processing, so they tended to use more of a computer scientist mindset - whereas now we’re more likely to use test cases to convince ourselves that code is correct.
CNLabelContactRelationYoungerCousinMothersSiblingsSonOrFathersSistersSon
The label for the contact’s mother’s sibling’s younger son or father’s sister’s younger son.
I thought it was just a male cousin, but it doesn’t include a cousin who’s your uncle’s son. Which culture needs this?
Compare to MessagePack’s example from their front page:
It answers 90% of my questions in a quick example.
A great post, interesting and to the point.
So you think it’s too unreasonable for you to cope with?
I think all of the communities would rather have something more than just a bare link. I’m not sure why you’re responding with such indignation, to be honest, it was a perfectly reasonable suggestion, politely made.
Thanks for the link, I forgot about CLAs. Interesting - this kind of thing seems to be controversial but common.
I’m not saying OpenTofu is doing any accusing, but I am. I was thinking an original author had the sole right to relicense code but I guess they found some legally plausible way to get it done. I wonder if the author was an OpenTofu employee.
A great read, thanks for sharing.