I know what phone I'm getting next.
>kids are now too dump to dial numbers themselves
Jesus Christ.
>>59538876
Every single cellphone can call emergency without unlocking for decade+, why do you need iPhone for that?
>>59538876
These iPhones can make calls, too? Wow I'm buying one.
Books every programmer should read. (You can mention books for an especific programming language too)
>>59538824
It's you again with that fucking watermark? Go to hell.
JS god tier
What is the hidden message in Pascal's Triangle when converted to binary?
Can anyone generate it with a script so we can see?
Newfags can't do this, of course.
>>59538759
is it crazy how saying sentences backwards creates backwards sentences saying how crazy it is
>>59538759
>What is the hidden message in Pascal's Triangle when converted to binary?
What the fuck are you on about?
>Can anyone generate it with a script so we can see?
No, top computer scientists still haven't figured out a way to generate Pascal's Triangle. Some believe it's impossible.
Programming fags
why doesn't this work?
<input type="file" name="flash">
<object>
<embed src="flash" width="100%" height="100%"></embed>
</object>
i don't know a shit about programming
but i just wanted to try making a html page that has file select button and then shows the .swf selected
What do you mean by "shows"? Play it?
>>59538762
yeah exactly.
If you wanna use swf, you're gonna need a flash plugin. Flash is depracated and dangerous to use. Don't use it. Ever.
Read about HTML5, especially canvas, and then about JS.
> website only works with internet explorer
>>59538701
kek
>>59538701
yeah
> website only works with internet explorer from three versions ago
What are you working on, /g/?
Old thread: >>59536938
C is a disservice to intelligent programmers. It has almost 0 features that a modern and intelligent programmer uses to be productive. Since C is such a timesink, it's popularity is falling more than any other languages in the market.
C is dying and it should die ASAP. C programmers are actually retards in general. C is a small language to grasp, exactly the kind of shit that makes things retard friendly.
C has no advanced features like C++ does.
But as a newfag you are kinda in the right direction. C is for newbies. Think of it this way:
During ancient times, counting to 10 was a big deal and a person who could count to 10 was considered to be "wise".
Fast forward a few century counting to 10 is so trivial we teach this to toddlers. Now toddlers appreciate the vast "knowledge" of counting to 10 while matured brains are busy with modern technologies.
C is from stone age and the people who still preach it is like overgrown toddlers that can't learn advanced things.
C doesn't have delegates
C doesn't have resizable arrays
C doesn't have strings
C doesn't have string concatenation
C doesn't have namespaces
C doesn't have exception handling
C doesn't have closures in the standard
C doesn't have unit tests
C doesn't have Function overloading
C doesn't have memory safety of any kind
C doesn't prevent memory exploits and has no bounds and runtime checks
C doesn't have dynamic method loading/creatin
C doesn't even have generics and templates
C doesn't have meta programming
C doesn't have mixins
C doesn't have higher order functions
C doesn't have contract programming
C doesn't have inner classes
C doesn't have function literals
C doesn't have array slicing
C has a very limited support for implicit parallelism
C doesn't even have string switches
C is a cancer that plagues the modern software industry. If you want guaranteed memory exploits and security vulnerabilities in your program with timesink development period then use Assembly, not C.
>trying to argue with C and C++ niggers about types
>they think polymorphism means inheritance and nothing else
What is the final solution to the OOP question?
Thank you for posting an anime pic.
How can we end Samsung cancer?
Get lost normie
Implying that the Samsung emoji isn't what peak performance looks like
are they taking it in the bum bum?
What's next for the CPU?
How will CPU manufacturers evolve? The standard CPUs are reaching the maximum lithography (Manufacture process), pulling the maximum clock it can provide and more cores isn't the solution.
Quantum computing is still a distant reality. Will they come up with a different material to build CPUs instead of silicon?
>>59538250
If you haven't notices, CPUs haven't evolved much in the past decade. Why do you think it'll be better?
The TL;DR is: More cores, less nanometers and probably more cache. Also, more CPUs on a motherboard.
moar coars is what we're going to get because much like the auto industry cpu manufacturers are heavily invested in current manufacturing. As well as as supporting industries providing materials.
>>59538386
But they can't build with less nanometers. It will be too unstable. More cache doesn't work, because after 1 MB, the hit rate in the cache stabilizes and they gains for each 1 MB is so little you can't even tell the difference. To use more cores, OS developers have to build mechanisms that can make use of all cores and not just 1 or 2.
Previous thread: >>59514724
IRC: #/tpg/ on irc.rizon.net
Other business laptops are also welcome in /tpg/ (e.g. Dell Latitude/Precision, HP EliteBook/ZBook).
----
If you're looking for purchase advice, READ THE BUYERS GUIDE FIRST. Then post, stating budget and requirements (e.g. size and performance).
Don't buy anything OTHER THAN T, X AND W/P SERIES if you want the Real ThinkPad Experienceâ„¢
Recommended models:
T420 - 14", normal size
X220 - 12.5", ultraportable
----
Why ThinkPad? (also applies to other business laptops)
>Used machines are plentiful and cheap.
>Excellent keyboards - tactile feel and quiet.
>Great durability: chassis uses a magnesium rollcage for structural integrity, with high quality plastic body panels.
>Utilitarian design: e.g. indicator LEDs, 7 row keyboard layout on older models.
>Docking stations that easily turns your laptop into a desktop.
>Easy to repair, upgrade and maintain thanks to readily available service manuals for every model. Spare parts are easy and cheap to obtain.
>The best trackpoint (that red thing in the middle of the keyboard). Great for those who type a lot or hate swiping their fingers all over a touchpad.
>Excellent GNU/Linux & *BSD support.
----
Used ThinkPad buyers guide:
http://ktgee.net/tpg
xsauc buyers guide:
http://www.dankpads.com
EPP discount for new ThinkPads (USA & Canada only, usually 15%+ off):
http://pastebin.com/JVwVGVTW
Helpful links and resources (Wiki, lookup tools and wallpapers):
http://pastebin.com/DYjEnVq1
>>59538119
Any display upgrades for a X220T? I saw there was a FHD display for the laptop version, but there wasn't any info about the tablet version.
>>59537975
That's just the screen protector. It's immaculate and matte underneath.
How? Luck of the draw. Model numbers are 'nominal' on these listings insofar as it will be a compatible IPS but it can be one of a number variant panels.
Anyway. It turned out okay, I took my own advice and got sticky pads.
Only comments are that it sits quite deep in the bezel which triggers me a bit.
Other than that it seems like you can see the screen border more easily almost as if it's a fractionally smaller screen diameter. Could also be Ive never inspected my screen this close and so never noticed.
Hi!
I want to try in a large document to count and find similar phrases. Is a collection of albums, and I want to know the same titles.
I use Word Frecuency Counter and Hermetic Word Frecuency Counter, but it are trial versions.
Know any similar program? Thanks.
That picture finally made me realize why some of the CLI are better without a GUI frontend.
Just look at that mess.
Uhm what? You mean cut a text file into individual words and then count the occurrences? Phrases seem more difficult because where does a phrase start and where does it end?
>>59538223
just now?!
CLI is the undisputed king of productivity and efficiency
what op needs is to brush up on his regex
sounds like what he's trying to do, you can do in vim with a single command
Help, i deleted the linux partition but grub shit is still here and Windows doesn't pop up when i restarted my computer, only pic related
>>59538018
Deserter. Servers you right!
Also, there are fuckloads of recovery images to repair/reinstall MBR or just update grub to show current OSes
>>59538018
grub is its own partition
I wanted to make a long password that looks totally random, but one I could remember. So here's what I came up with. I take a sentence that's easy to remember (for me) usually having to do with movies or cartoons or something.
Lucy tricked Charlie Brown with the football again while Linus and Snoopy watched.
I turn that into:
LucY7ChwN#w7f@wLiuS@SnpY%w
So all I have to do is remember the sentence and the rules to apply to it. Good enough?
>>59538014
Sure, but don't forget to make a new password now you posted this one on the interwebs.
>>59538120
Oh, that's just an example. No worries. But thanks!
I usually make a password like:
>2g12BD421
I write it out, and after a couple times of using it, I automatically remember it.
Dumb question here, I saw a notice in my gmail inbox saying that my account was logged into from a new device, showing a Taiwan IP and Chrome browser. I often use a VPN, and I contacted their service and they confirmed that the IP address belongs to them, and I in fact did log into their Taiwan location today, but I don't remember what time it was. Sounds all good, it was probably me that logged in...
But I use firefox, not chrome. Is it possible that gmail mistakenly thought I was using Chrome? How likely is that?
I went ahead and changed my password just to be safe, but how fucked am I?
You can literally see which devices are connect to your gmail account.
>>59537977
That login was 3 hours ago and it says Windows (which is what I use), and Chrome 56.0. The IP address belongs to the same VPN company I use according to their support. But it's not recognizing that login as my device (my computer). I login to my gmail account all the time when connected to my VPN, but this is the first time I received an alert about it.
>>59537963
Well, Firefox is now a chrome-based browser, since it uses the same interface.
Start using PaleMoon OP, and next time you won't be confused. It'll tell you that you signed in using Firefox.
Space ruins are fun. This is a retractable shelter at Vandenberg used for the THOR/DELTA launchers.
Again at Vandenberg...a 1st gen Atlas gantry.
>>59537964
Another angle...
and a bit farther back. They once attempted to reuse the site but that launch failed.
https://www.asus.com/Graphics-Cards/ROG-STRIX-GTX1080TI-O11G-GAMING/
What's stopping you from buying the best graphic card ever made?
i only play starcraft2 so i dont need it.
my 290x still keeps me warm.
>>59537905
The best graphics card is the Titan X and my demands are stopping me.
My secondhand GTX 760 is plenty for my casual gaming needs.
I have a gaming laptop