Rest in Peace @GmNaroditsky. Huge loss to the chess world, only 29 years old. Your video's were the best, with an such in depth explanation of your though process and moves.
We're calling on the Canadian government to impose a full and immediate arms embargo on Israel. Act now to demand a suspension of all trade in arms and military technology with Israel: https://t.co/MjvLbgG5r2 #ArmsEmbargoNow
@CaseyNewton@kevinroose Love the show #HardFork! Re, your crypto interview with @cdixon. For all "it's just young, it'll happen eventually", rhetoric, this article is 5 years old but is truer now then ever:
https://t.co/qferclB7lw
One of the craziest stories I read in a while. Now I wonder if some of those calls I get from scammers are people in forced labour.
https://t.co/uWGnxVSwKQ
@kastiglione Thanks for the Stacked Commit scripts! I implemented your recommended changes here:
https://t.co/PE0Ip0bi0s
In particular, improving updatepr
The Texas Group Waging a National Crusade Against Climate Action. Jason Isaac, of the Texas Public Policy Foundation tweeted “Today, I’m thankful to live a high-carbon lifestyle and wish the rest of the world could too,” on Thanksgiving https://t.co/9hdg0hoaU7
@GitGuardian Once you orphan the history though, what does rebase get you over cherry-pick? Seems like you're just getting more merge conflicts with no benefit.
@GitGuardian nice detailed article. Do you think that having the team cherry-picking their outstanding commits on the new history will be easier (less conflicts) than using rebase?
https://t.co/4Mb4VwvumC
@globeandmail 2/2 Coming away from the article knowing nothing about the difference between green and blue hydrogen, ("love all my children", um... why are letting your guest deflect like this?) or analysis on what the actual benefit any of it would make.
@globeandmail 1/2 Hi, enjoying your new show. I think you could have used more probing questions, as the piece sounded like a promo material. Your guest did not sound like the journalist with in-depth expertise she is. Your last savior question was pure Canadian fluff.
@nytimestech@ShiraOvide Some of the subscriptions are worth the absence of ads on their own. People laugh at the idea of a YouTube subscription, but I couldn't go back to the ad version. It clears space for your mind.
@DanielandJorge Or even more improbably, an earth that remained cold for billions of years because the radioactive particles at the center of the earth have not yet decayed? Not one particle has yet decayed. Because, well, it technically has a non-zero probability.
@DanielandJorge 1/5 You mentioned a few times, in jokes and in seriousness, that given an infinite universe anything that is possible will occur. "Anything that can happen, no matter how improbable, will occur, and will occur an infinite number of times".
@DanielandJorge 1/2 Are you saying that, given that the universe is infinite in size, that there is an earth out there where in every double-slit experiment, the photon always passes through the left side? And physicists are wondering, why does the photon always go through the left side??
4/5 If it's only a matter of increasingly astronomical probabilities, given an infinite number of chances, will it will it by necessity come to fruition?