Hey! Spoiler alert for Shaz's change of haircut. At least it doesn't show her making sandcastles, I suppose.
addie
If I believed that they were sincerely interested in trying to improve their product, then that would make sense. You can only improve yourself if you understand how your failings affect others.
I suspect however that Saltman will use it to come up with some superficial bullshit about how their new 6.x model now has a 90% reduction in addiction rates; you can't measure anything, it's more about the feel, and that's why it costs twice as much as any other model.
How's the lag on one of those things? Doesn't matter for an RPG, but playing some of the old platformers on a modern TV is an exercise in misery, and I just couldn't get past the first couple of levels in Um Jammer Lammy without connecting up a PC monitor instead.
Places where I've seen that live of projector are for eg. showing the football in a pub, and the sound and screen are noticeably out-of-sync.
A binary tree is one way of preparing data, usually for sorting. Each node can have a left, right, or both, children.
A
/ \
B C
/ \
D E
"Inverting the tree" means swapping the children for each node, so that the order that the nodes are visited is reversed. Depending on whether you want to copy the tree or swap it in place then the algorithm is different. C++ provides iterators too, so providing a "order reversed" iterator can be done efficiently as well.
You're going to have to visit every node and do at least one swap for every node, and an efficient algorithm won't do much more than that. Bring unable to do it suggests that the student programmer doesn't understand stacks or recursion yet, so they've more to learn.
After having used Grub for about twenty years (eek) I was uncertain about the alternatives, but systemd-boot is absurdly better. Much better configuration, much better documentation, fixes a while pile of bugs that Grub team had as "won't fix" for years and years. No reason to ever go back.
Does make me think about the story of Thales of Miletus; ancient Greek philosopher, got asked what use was philosophy if it doesn't make you any money. Predicted good weather, and monopolised all the olive presses, made a fortune.
For a modern example; shares in Rheinmetall (German firm who make, amongst other things, the turrets for tanks) have gone through the roof after the recent US debacle. I could have told you a year ago that Trump getting in would have meant the US abandoning Ukraine; obvious in hindsight that that would mean a boon for European arms manufacturers.
I don't think you need to be quick to take advantage. I think you need insight. If there's a topic that you're knowledgeable about and you can see which way the wind is blowing, then you can make your own boat.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thales_of_Miletus#Olive_presses
Can't possibly be slower than GCP, either. Performance of BigQuery is something to behold.
Cloud makes sense if you've a very 'spiky' load, I suppose. A website that needs one VM most of the year, but a hundred on a couple of days. Maybe your data processing needs 100 TB of storage a couple of times a month, but not the rest of the time. But for fixed, predictable bread-and-butter stuff?
Well, yes. But I would argue that if you have the skills to defeat eg. the Draconic Sentinel with just two runes, then it's probably not your first rodeo. Stumbling over all the steps to eg. Varre or Hyettas quests on an unguided playthrough, which require specific things in a certain order in a huge world, are not particularly likely either. Its size works against it in that regard.
For people that really love Dark Souls and have finished it repeatedly, including challenge runs? Five hours is probably taking your time, using rubbish weapons for a laugh. For your first time playing through, hell no - probably more like thirty. The first DS has some unreasonable traps for the unwary - one of the stats is a dead end, many of the weapons scale really badly. Maybe better to start with Scholar or 3, that are better balanced.
To quote an old RockPaperShotgun comment about Dark Souls, the best decisions are the ones that you don't know you're making. DS definitely has storyline changes depending on where you go first, what you do and who you speak to, which is far more natural than a two-way dialogue option for "blatant RPG decision making".
The tragedy of Elden Ring is that it's far too long for that. I've played through DS several times and would expect to get it finished in about five hours, so can play through the various plot line resolutions in a long evening of gaming. ER has a variety of ways that the DLC can play out, you say? Best book a fortnight off work so that I can get a hundred hours of gaming in.
Undoubtedly right, but might give the impression that iron is used because it's a better material for weapons than bronze - that's not its advantage.
Bronze is harder than iron, and holds a better edge - bronze knives are lighter than iron ones. (Harder metals aren't necessarily better for swords, tho, as they'll shatter rather than bend.). It also doesn't corrode so readily. Bronze can also be worked around 1000 °C, which can be achieved with primitive forges, whereas iron needs about 1250 and needs much better tech.
The first real advantage iron has over bronze is that iron is everywhere, whereas bronze production needs tin mines, and they're quite rare. If you can achieve the heat, it's much easier to equip your whole army.
The second advantage iron has is that if you can achieve about 1500 °C in your smelter, and you've mastered getting 'some but not too much carbon' alloyed with it, you can make steel, which is a huge improvement over bronze. That's generally not tech that could be achieved by ancient societies, though.