LeberechtReinhold

@LeberechtReinhold@kbin.social
0 Post – 6 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

The hate for mods is quite insane. I can understand that there were some instances of power abuse and people should be critical of those, but I dont think the widespread hate they get. It's a lot of work that people don't realize, and people hating them just because polls for closing or taking action dont turn out exactly they wanted (and, if politics is any indication, probably many of them didnt even vote), to a protest in which, as normal users, they dont have to do anything... its all insane to me.

The problem is that people ever bought enough gold to cover costs.

Admitedly, its also reddit problem that they went from hosting links/text to also hosting images/video which is a completely different (and more expensive) beast.

I never thought that old organization names became available on Github. After a merge makes sense to keep them locked again or pass ownership to the new owner, not let anyone create that under the old name.

Is there a particular use case it works this way?

That said I doubt this affects millions of orgs, are organization renames that common?

In my supermarket they are mandatory. You get your fruit and you put them in a scale which prints out an sticker with the weight, pricing and barcode, which is what os scanned at checkout.

This would be all avoided if they had scales at checkout and the clerk used them (which would also reduce fraud) but of course is cheaper having way less staff.

Can't believe this article doesn't mention shaders. Node based programs to generate textures or the final shaders are everywhere, on all engines or render software. Unless you are writing very, very, very specific shaders, you can almost always solve it with a node flow and it pretty much is the norm.

Things that are highly parallelized and computation focused are the best for flow based programming, and shaders are probably the best example of that.

Not the best design for a stamp, but its nice to see him recognized. I highly recommend the March graphic novel (its sold either as a single book or three separate volumes), which he helped write. It's a very good overview of the civil rights movement, and touches on some of the things that are usually skipped.