I remember writing code in notepad at the university.
Moving from notepad to powerful IDE was 🤯.
Now I'm moving from powerful IDE to terminal. It's again 🤯.
#ClaudeAI#Codex
Kubernetes cluster with 100.000 nodes!🤯
"This is a story about what happens when Kubernetes, designed to orchestrate containers at scale, meets the kind of scale where its own optimizations become catastrophic."
One of the most influential programming textbooks was first published as a paperback 40 years ago today: MIT's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs."
Read it for free here: https://t.co/jDbhEbEitW
@biciklomposvetu Naleteh na ovo u Beču pre nekoliko godina. Privremeno su pomerili stanicu par metara, uredno nakačili svu ovu skalameriju na originalnu lokaciju i postavili privremeni znak za stanicu. Sve stalo na jednu fotku.
Kod ozbiljnijih relokacija postave redare da pomažu putnicima. 🙃
Hey @DARS_SI, "Simplicity comes first" is on the landing page and then I have to choose vignette that is appropriate for my car based on the height of the vehicle at the position of the front axle. It's far from simple.
At least add "Other models" in the "2A or 2B tool". Thanks!
Human-like beings are doomed to drop toast butter-side down 🥪
In 1995, Robert Matthews wrote a paper showing that toast landing butter-side down isn’t just bad luck or evidence of Murphy’s Law
('If it can go wrong, it will') - it’s physics and ultimately ascribable to the values of the fundamental constants.
Toast typically begins to rotate as it tips off a table, but the height of most tables (~75 cm) is just enough for it to rotate about half a turn, landing butter-side down. This isn’t due to butter's weight or aerodynamics, which are negligible. Rather, it's about the torque and time during the fall.
In this paper, Matthews builds a detailed dynamical model of the toast’s tumble and shows experimentally that under realistic conditions (with little horizontal velocity), there's a built-in bias toward a butter-side down landing.
Surprisingly, this bias is linked to fundamental constants: table height is constrained by human height, which in turn is limited by biomechanical stability and molecular bond strength (à la Press, 1980). Given the values of fundamental constants, the result is universal - all intelligent, human-like beings are doomed to drop toast butter-side down.
To avoid this fate? A little push adds horizontal velocity, reducing rotational torque, a counterintuitive fix but backed by physics.