Can I get easy quick
ExperimentalGuy
Does anyone understand the Pearson coefficient part enough to explain it? I don't really understand why they're measuring correlation between memory, energy, and time in that way/ how you'd interpret it.
LMMS and reaper are both goof options. I would recommend LMMS for a beginner because it comes with a lot of free instruments and examples bundled with it.
Here's an example of inline assembly in C++. You can write assembly inside your higher level code for performance optimizations to just doing really specific things that you can only really do at an assembly level. I've never done it before but it definitely is cool when people do it.
Every child born is a new Linux user
Theres bearblog. You can host an instance or post on the main one.
New copypasta dropped
This comment is probably gonna be annoying but its just an exercise in experimental design for me.
When measuring births, there's also a lot of other factors to rule out. I take this graph as saying "Humans tend to have sex in a specific season" and that's what I'm going to respond to.
Some other factors may be that theres more failed pregnancies during specific times of the year, and the sex rate per season is relatively constant. Maybe humans tend to have sex in ways that conceive during specific times of the year. There's really not conclusive evidence of a mating season given this graph, although it is a helpful visual when it comes to looking at birth rates.
This is such an interesting point I've never heard come up before, wow
Lemmy, NPR, and AP are the only things I read now.
Stop using types for variables
RiMusic is great for listening to... well, music. It has a bunch of nice features, allows you to download music, and even copy your local db of what you've listened to to a file which is great for backing up. I thought it got abandoned by its maintainer a while ago, but it seems like it's still an active project.