I’m trying this.
I’m trying this.
If you are used to driving a manual, you don’t rest your foot on the foot rest area, you keep it just about to push the clutch. Also, saying the brake pedal is the full width of two pedals is wrong, but it is certainly wider. I have gone for the clutch in an automatic once and just barely caught the edge of the brake pedal. The results were very confusing, and without exaggerating it took me 5-10 seconds to figure out what I had done. It was while driving my mom’s car with her in it and she looked at me with the most “what the fuck are you doing?” look she has ever made.
This was all over twenty years ago but yes, it is definitely possible.
Interesting, my first thought was similar but different.
Clothing.
Now I have to go poke around the Internet trying to understand the history of both, which came first, and speculate about which made a bigger impact on our species.
edit:
Yep, it was fire. By like a lot. Both have pretty big ranges, but fire seems to be in the hundreds of thousands of years ago range, and clothing seems to be in the dozens of thousands of years.
I use youtrack. It’s a project management tool. It’s not open source, but does have a self hostable option.
https://www.jetbrains.com/help/youtrack/server/installation-and-upgrade.html
I guess you’ve never heard of the National Organization of Restoring Men.
I swear I am not making this up.
I’m a little sad I had to scroll so long to even find a reference to the old “pogs”. Damn what a weird fad.
I know you asked about memory, but the computer I just assembled had a 750watt power supply. As an American I think we should refer to it as a “one horsepower power supply” instead.
I feel like most of my googling of simple code is because I know what I’m trying to do, but I don’t remember the correct function name and or language structure for the language I’m currently using.
Clearly this is what we call “self documenting code”.
That feeling of hope as you listen to the radio during breakfast as they read out the names of which local schools are delayed and closed. Even more the excitement when your school changes from delayed to closed.
“Black Pepper Jack” and “Four Cheese” Doritos. They were both so good in their own way.
“Dirty deeds and a thunder Jeep” -Misheard Lyrics
On my current team, when we were trying to choose a style, my only input was “any style that can be checked/applied with a git commit hook.”
I get some people prefer reading code in a particular format. Let them configure their editor to apply it, but let’s keep the version history in one unavoidably consistent style. Pretty please.
It’s not exactly what I think you’re looking for, but depending on what you are trying to do, maybe look at hackmd/codimd.
It’s more like Google docs meets markdown formatting. It’s goal is realtime collaboration but I’ve definitely used it for syncing todo lists with people.
Codimd is the self hostable version.
Oh, and I think there is a way to have it sync with a GitHub repo too, in case that is useful.
Links for convenience:
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I’m pretty sure some compiler settings can change this. I have a fuzzy memory of a bug that went away when compiled with debug flags enabled and the difference was that unassigned variables were being zeroed vs not zeroed.
For some reason mismatched silverware always bothered me.
It is one of the first things I purchased when I moved out of my parents house, and I’ve had a complete set of matching silverware since.
…except for one spoon. I have one spoon my great grandmother gave me that I’ve held onto for over 40 years that doesn’t match. That spoon is only used for eating ice cream.
True, but I can share it with friends who already think I’m weird because I use Linux and they can have another reason why they think I am weird.
There is a shoe store where I used to live named Red’s Shoe Barn. I was always hoping the correct lights would fail to make their sign read “ed’s hoe Bar”. To my knowledge it never happened, but I don’t know.