Telekinesis, and somehow looking like he’s being filmed using early 90s TV cameras.
Telekinesis, and somehow looking like he’s being filmed using early 90s TV cameras.
I’ve been forced to do react for years and I still don’t like or understand it. Most times plain JavaScript is easier and quicker to write and quite maintainable if people can resist the urge to take the piss with nested anonymous functions.
I honestly can’t get my head around the idea that people can hit the ground running with react, but can’t write unabstracted JavaScript. It’s like a MotoGP rider not being able to ride a push bike.
Sorry about that. Only way I could think to stop spam was to use IP as unique id. Try disconnecting from WiFi.
Edit: if you’ve already voted, it overwrites that vote with the new one. This is just the quickest laziest way of stopping someone using a bot to skew the results.
Good point. I kinda rushed it and didn’t really think to check. Just bought it cause .uk is a better tld
The first step in my mental roadmap for making this more than a toy is going to be user accounts and magic links, so small orgs can manually vet people for local party branches and meetings. I’ll have to look into TLSNotary.
it’s pretty good for things that I can eye scan and verify that’s what I would have typed anyway. But I’ve found it suggesting things I wouldn’t remotely permit to things that are “sort of” correct.
Yeah. I haven’t bothered with it much but the best use I can see of it is just rubber ducking.
Last time I used it was to asked how to change contrast in a numpy image. It said to multiply each channel by contrast. (I don’t even think this is right and it should be ((original value-128) * contrast) + 128)
not original value * contrast
as it suggested), but it did remind me I can just run operations on colour channels.
Wait what’s my point again? Oh yeah, don’t trust anyone that can’t tell you what the output is supposed to do.
Never approach an empty section of the bar. Make sure to form an orderly queue that blocks the front door and the route to the toilets.
Almost went to Stonehenge after visiting family down south. They wanted £60 and wouldn’t let us take the dog in.
You can apparently get in cheaper if you’re a member of English Heritage. So we looked online to see if it was a fair deal and what other sites membership grants you.
Turns out that English Heritage are a bunch of robbing bastards (they literally stole seahenge!) that enclose our historic sites in order to charge money for access to them.
I won’t be visiting if I have to pay them.
I hope you like sad acoustic covers of beach boys songs, cause you’re getting sad acoustic covers of beach boys songs.
I don’t mind if indie devs try something experimental that melts your computer. Like beamNG needs a decent computer but the target audience kinda knows about that sort of stuff.
The problem is with games like cities skylines 2. Most people buying that game probably don’t even know how much RAM they have, it shouldn’t be unplayable on a mid range PC.
I can think of a few games franchises that wouldn’t have trashed their reputation if they’d have had an internal rule like “if it doesn’t play on 50% of the machines on Steam’s hardware survey, it’s not going out”
I’ve used TH72 a bit. I’d describe it more as shock proof than flexible. It’ll certainly make your miniatures robust, but it’s nowhere near as soft as something like TPU.