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"We, too, would sacrifice it all for the nut"
Phrasing Snickers... phrasing
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Nooo , not Mr. Peanut.
R.I.P.B.
It's been 6 months since I joined the gym and there's been no progress. I'm going there tomorrow in person to find out what's really going on!
JaxCoder.com
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I do nut know of him, but oil mourn him anyway.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Don't think so, but he was roasted a lot.
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I miss getting peanuts on the plane, now it's dried peas and dried broad beans and some other things.
yeah I realise in the 100,000 flights per day 1 or 2 with a genuine peanut allergy might be aboard a plane per year (and those 3 or 4 people in the entire world sensitive enough to be affected by their neighbour eating peanuts are already on appropriate medication) - so they can just say "no thanks"
airlines let people make meal requests (veggie, vegan, kiddie, kosher ...),
why not snack requests? "would you like peanuts or this other non peanut parrot food crap?"
after many otherwise intelligent sounding suggestions that achieved nothing the nice folks at Technet said the only solution was to low level format my hard disk then reinstall my signature. Sadly, this still didn't fix the issue!
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So, what's the biggest income source of CNN?
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: So, what's the biggest income source of CNN?
I don't watch CNN so can't honestly say, but if I had to venture a guess, I'd say pharmaceuticals then, during election years, followed closely by political contributions.
But do you not understand the difference between regular ads and native advertising? That was my main point.
When your newscaster is eating a taco and raving at how great it is and that there's a 2-for-1 deal right now at all participating Taco Bells, are you okay with that?
Leave the ads for the commercial breaks.
[Edit]
For a great education on this topic, have a listen to the No Agenda podcast (you might recognize one of the hosts, John C. Dvorak, as a long-time PC Mag columnist). They essentially look at the week's news, and deconstruct how the mainstream media are presenting news stories and how they're being censored by their corporate advertisers. They play a lot of clips nobody else would ever run, or show how sound bites have been carefully edited to present a different slant on things. If you stick with it, after a few episodes, you'll come to see the news in a whole different light. Plus it's very entertaining, once you get into it. They record two 3-hour podcasts every week - I subscribe to the podcast and find I don't need to watch news anymore--they do a better job keeping me up to date.
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No, I'm just suggesting that they were quite aware of native advertising
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They are, indeed, but are their viewers? Some people are dumb enough to think this is a newsworthy thing, and not a promotion, which is what it is. See the edit to my previous response...
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If I am to answer that question I might slide heavily into sarcasm.
It would also quickly reach soapbox territory.
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: It would also quickly reach soapbox territory.
No worries then - nobody can tell you to take it to the soapbox!
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I think I will indeed listen to it. At least once.
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It requires a commitment, especially with all the inside jokes, and things you just won't get if you've never listened or haven't been listening for a while.
But like I said, even though they produce 6 hours a week, it takes the place of any news program I might watch - and leaves me better informed. And entertained at the same time.
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Partial NFA to DFA transformations, opportunistic like so they skip transforming sections of the graph that have too many input values to compare given a reasonable (probably definable) threshold.
This way it short circuits large unicode ranges and keeps those as NFA, while compacting the parts of the graph it can to DFA.
If it hasn't, I may need to produce an article about it but it's for some serious CompSci nerds as opposed to just coders (often not the same thing)
This optimizing compiler I'm writing is turning out to be a chore, but I'm learning a lot.
Update: I forwent the DFA transition so far altogether and simply doing the NFA to code generates tighter code
L0000: save 0
L0001: jmp L0002, L0008, L0017, L0021
L0002: jmp L0003
L0003: switch case "A".."Z", "_", "a".."z":L0004
L0004: switch case "A".."Z", "_", "a".."z", "0".."9":L0005, default:L0005
L0005: jmp L0004, L0006
L0006: save 1
L0007: match 0
L0008: jmp L0009
L0009: jmp L0010, L0011
L0010: switch case "0":L0015
L0011: switch case "-":L0012, default:L0012
L0012: switch case "1".."9":L0013
L0013: switch case "0".."9":L0014, default:L0014
L0014: jmp L0013, L0015
L0015: save 1
L0016: match 1
L0017: jmp L0018
L0018: switch case " ", "\t", "\r", "\n", "\v", "\f":L0019
L0019: save 1
L0020: match 2
L0021: any
L0022: save 1
L0023: match -1
I still need to do things like pass over the code and turn the code at L0018: for example, to a simple "set" instruction
Real programmers use butterflies
modified 22-Jan-20 21:50pm.
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'Festoon'. It's a real thing for me. It cools paper coming out of a printing press (which includes dryers to dry ink, which also heat the paper) by running it through a set of rollers that run the paper up and down through a 6-8 foot space, something like this:
___ ___
/ \ / \ ^
| | | | | |
| | | | | |
| | | | | 6-8 feet
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| | | | | V
\___/ \___/ There will a set of 10 or more rollers at the top and at the bottom.
For some infantile reason this word just sounds silly to me.
What silly words do you folks have to use in your industry?
Software Zen: delete this;
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just as a general programming term, "foobar"
which i think probably means something, but also doesn't.
lorum foobar ipsum baz
Real programmers use butterflies
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FUBAR (disambiguation) - Wikipedia[^]
The alternative spelling "foobar" I believe got its start in The C Programming Language by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie. They used the names foo and bar a lot in their examples.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Gary Wheeler wrote: They used the names foo and bar a lot in their examples.
As do I. I wasn't sure where it started. I picked it up along the way.
Real programmers use butterflies
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The "K&R C" is such a seminal text for all of the so-called semicolon languages, its memes have spread far and wide.
Software Zen: delete this;
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No, foo and bar, and blah, zoo, and a bunch of other silly short words come from the Lisp 1.5 Programmer's Manual, copyright 1962.
God I'm getting old.
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So that's where K&R got them.
Software Zen: delete this;
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I kind of want to buy it, just for posterity's sake.
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Not to be confused with FUBAR.
(And definitely not to be sung to the tune of a certain "Electric Six" song[^]. "I wanna take you to a foo bar!")
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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