puttputt

@puttputt@beehaw.org
0 Post – 16 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

People often use the OSI's Open Source Definition when using the term "open source". One of its criteria says "The license must allow modifications and derived works" which this license does not allow.

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The reason they checked that it started with "Windows 9" was because it worked for "Windows 95" and "Windows 98"

Yeah, it's like saying I can "compress" a png of the Mona Lisa to just the string "Mona Lisa" because I have a database of art.

Disturbingly, yes

Sorry, i said it was a mersenne prime, then realized it wasnt, so edited it and deleted it. It was a mess

Is there a field in Tinder you can fill out with your job title?

Yes

And I'm asking how Tinder is verifying that.

They're not. It's fake

cd without arguments takes you to $HOME, so it's the same as cd ~

You have a typo: It should be x86_64, not x86-64

You might want to check out microMathematics Plus. I last used it a few years ago. I remember being impressed by it, but thought it was way overkill for something I'd need on my phone.

That is what it means. Any detail in the waveform that is not captured by a 48kHz sample rate is due to frequencies that humans can't hear.

If it's on Github doesn't that make it OS?

No, when talking about open source software, people typically refer to a definition along the lines of the Open Source Initiative's Open Source Definition. To distinguish this from software that you can only see the source (but don't have rights to copy and modify it), they'll use the term Source Available Software.

I don't really know about the software you guys were talking about, but the repositories I looked at used the MIT license, which is OSI approved. However, that might not be all of the code they use. It's not uncommon for a company to open source a "base" version, but they deploy a version that's altered from that (I've got no clue whether they do or don't).

Ctrl-Shift-N restores closed windows

It's not

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surely there would have been at least one star between it and Earth. Or am I (as a non astronomer) underestimating how much space there is in space?

Yes, you might be underestimating the emptiness of space, but it's also a case of selection bias. The only stuff we see is stuff that isn't blocked by something closer. There are black holes out there with a star between us and it, but we don't know about them because we can't see them.

A somewhat related fun fact is that we can't see very far in the plane of our galaxy because our view ends up being blocked by stars and dust. So if you plot the position of the galaxies that we know about, the structure looks like two cones.

The way it is usually verbally described however I would have thought a black hole is in the center of a sphere so that the image should just look like a circle (no hole)

The system of around a black hole (or any other object in the universe) has an angular momentum that is just the sum of the angular momenta of all the parts that make it up. If it's dense enough that collisions happen frequently (or given enough time), the collisions make it so that all of the constituent parts end up with angular momentum in about the same direction. This is why there's a disc and not a sphere. Anything with a different angular momentum ends up crossing through the disc, colliding with the stuff in the disc.

And if it really is donut shaped then if it rotates 90⁰ we would see no hole just a thick line of the stuff circling it and yet we never see images like that.

We wouldn't, actually. Because of the light-bending effects of a black hole, you see the opposite side of the disc over/under the black hole.

I should really just buy a cable for my xbox 360 controllers

If you're talking about the official wireless xbox 360 controller, I believe the cable is only used for power, not data.