Comments

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

ForgotAboutDre, to linux in Intel Core Ultra performance in Linux is 15% higher than in Windows

I wonder if Linux is 15% better, or Microsoft tracking uses that much processing.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

If you don’t like MATLAB your probably not the correct audience. It’s for people needing to do data analysis, simulation or control and have a lot of money to pay for the libraries. The things software developers hate about it tend to be what makes it better for statistics and modelling. Math works even suggest it isn’t appropriate for making software as the sell simulink coder that turns simulink models into c++ code.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

Excel masters wish the downloaded an ide a just coded all those tools the have to support now.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

It’s turning complete, so it’s should be able to do anything. Power point is also turning complete, but not practical. Excel is practical enough to get started then moving on to something better gets hard because people depend on those excel sheets.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

Once your over the hump, it’s a pleasure to use relative to word. Especially if your document gets large or has lots of maths in it.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

The reduced feature set in the web app is either development hasn’t reached parity, or they want it to be just enough to compete with Google sheets but keep people using the windows app.

A better price of software would be several different tools. But Microsoft want to keep the features set and backwards compatibility and the users don’t want big changes so the messy mishmash it what results.

Excel is used as a app builder, a database, plotting tool, table formatting, dashboard, visual basic environment, simulation environment there’s probably many more uses. I think it was supposed to be a calculator and accountancy book combination.

If anyone knew excel (or spreadsheets in general) would become what they did they would design it completely differently. A database that links to different pieces of software would be much better. That can’t exist now, because the markets consumed by excel.

ForgotAboutDre, to science_memes in despite all my rage IT keeps me trapped like a rat in a cage.

Excel does too many things. A better price of software would do less.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in is a hot dog a sandwich

According to this diagram it makes it a quiche. The definition should be a tart, a quiche is a savoury custard tart.

That would make the pizza a tart.

A pie would be a calzone according to this diagram.

ForgotAboutDre, to homeassistant in Haier hits Home Assistant plugin dev with takedown notice

You are right, TOS isn’t the law. However businesses will try to trick you with this technique, especially if they don’t think you have any legal support. You can’t commit a crime just because the victim agreed to it, no amount of contracts negate this. Employers often pull this trick to force employees to accept illegal practices.

The person hosting and publishing the code may have never agreed to the TOS. So can’t be bound by it. They also can revoke their agreement, and no longer have to comply with it. However, continued use of the businesses web services likely requires agreeing to the TOS and this plug in may be using the businesses web services to make the plugin work.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in I think we've been had

Soccer was an abbreviation used by posh people. Associate football -> sociate -> soccer. Much like rugby is called ruggers by the same group of people today. It was an informal term.

Association football was popular amongst the working class in the UK, who didn’t use the same types of abbreviations. So it wasn’t referred to as soccer by the them. When radio/TV became common the presenters wouldn’t use abbreviations like soccer and so it was referred to as Association Football or Football.

In the US the posh abbreviation took over, likely because many British travellers to the US would be posh and not working class. At least the ones traveling for leisure and taking part in sports activities. Working class would mostly be immigrants and wouldn’t be brushing shoulders with those in sports media.

American call the rugby like sport, American Football because it is played on foot and not horse. It would also share a common ancestry of completely moving a ball from one place to another on foot, like football and rugby.

ForgotAboutDre, (edited ) to memes in I think we've been had

Or you are 6 feet tall.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in I think we've been had

I avoid volumetric measurement whenever I can. I’ve found weight based measurement to be vastly superior, especially when you have a 0.1g digital scale. It’s much easier to weight 100g of water than check the line on 100ml.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in I think we've been had

It’s better. Because metric is still an option, but it’s not as good as it could be.

If the English speaking world fully committed to metric DIY, maker stuff and cooking online would be much better. But I’d much rather this than a fully imperial system. It much easier to work in metric and convert between than work in imperial. Imperial requires a lot more knowledge of the measurement system your working with than metric does. Because everything scales in metric the same and you can use exponentials or prefixes to express sizes. Though the US imperial system does simplify this system by using pounds for everything rather than stones.

It is surprising that the US still clings to imperial measurement despite being the first Anglosphere country to adopt metric/decimal currency. Along with the metric system being associated with liberty and enlightenment that was a big part of the philosophy behind the start of the US.

When it comes down to, in the UK and the US both imperial systems are quantified by metric standards. So it’s purely a mirage, because all reference lead back to metric measurements. Not brass yardsticks installed in the town centre. Imperial is now just a middle man maintained for nostalgia. The cost to switching is every decreasing as all series industry uses metric.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in I think we've been had

No it’s worse, because they use the same names for different volumes and weights.

ForgotAboutDre, to memes in I think we've been had

It’s old people. They vote and don’t like change.

Everyone in the UK under 40 never used imperial in their education, but everything is still imperial.

Even stuff that’s not supposed to be. Milk is sold in pints but labelled in ml. Sometimes it’s litres because these are smaller. Timbre is all sold in a metric equivalent, but it isn’t consistent. You don’t know if the piece you’ve had delivered is 2.4m or 2.44m. Rulers have both metric and imperial, unless you pay extra for a single system - which makes them harder to use.

The worst thing is recipes, many recipes are imperial online because of the USA. American imperial measurements aren’t the same as UK ones.

It is all driven by ignorance. The royal family (TV show) summed this ignorance up best. They complained it took them longer to get to the destination because their sat nav was in kilometres and there’s more kilometres than miles so everything is further away.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • localhost
  • All magazines
  • Loading…
    Loading the web debug toolbar…
    Attempt #