Just to validate then, these barely moving electrons will create a field that induces a current on the electrons on the other side of the wire that is 1m away, which would turn on the bulb, that if the lightbulb was an ideal current detector that ignores all other sources of electric fields?
I had a question about the veritasium video, at some point they say that the electrons barely move, that confused me since that doesn't match my understanding of amperage, flow of electrons being for example 6.24x10^18 per second.
Anyone care to help me out? Maybe that just isn't much?
I don't disagree with a lot of your above reply, but this part in particular picked my interest, mostly because I don't understand how its not racist.
> They aren't saying "this man is unable to perform this role due to his race" in a racist-against-this-person way, they're putting additional structural checks in place as a preventative measure.
Its not about the intention of the emitter, its about the receiving end of it.
It seems that if we flip this so that the receiving end is part of a minority we would all think this is utterly racist independent of the intention, how is it not?
From your example the only thing that happened is that now you hold x euros and Kraken holds x amount of USDT.
Unless Kraken goes to Tether org and asks "hey I got these USDTs, please give me the USD" no redemption has occurred.
That some people can in effect transact USDT for fiat via other mechanisms (like your example above) says nothing about Tether org backing or reserves.
Until you go to Tether org with your USDT's and ask them for USD you won't know if they have the reserves.
I really don't like chord like shortcuts, while ctrl and [ are positioned in a way you don't have to contort your hand it kind of requires you to move away from the hjkl row or stretch your pinkies. Consider mapping esc to jk (as a sequence) it works surprisingly well.
inoremap jk <esc>
and
inoremap <esc> <nop>
so that you never use esc again
not having chord like shortcuts was one of the main reasons that led me to try vim over emacs in the beginning, so I kind of think they're "anti" vim.
We built our own hardware to control and interface with vending machines, doing what the Web 2.0 did for Web. We’re truly full-stack so you can expect to see Hardware/Firmware/IoT/Mobile/Web/Backend/Cellular/Bluetooth and others.
Firmware and embedded engineer
- Experience in Linux based embedded systems in production
- Experience in C/C++ based development
- Experience with Linux kernel driver development (highly desired)
- Experience with high-level programming language development such as Python (desired)
- Experience with Linux BSP creation (desired)
- Experience with buildroot and/or yocto build systems (desired)
What we have is a Linux based embedded system that also has a hard real-time processing component. The suitable candidate feels comfortable working with Linux platform with core components written in C, but the application architecture also utilizes high-level language components to provide the overall service and speed up the development. Has confidence in participating in low level debugging (logic analyzer etc), core dump analyzing of application failures and also general configuration matters of Linux.
We’re looking for go-getters that enjoy taking ownership over problems and seeing them driven to a solution, atm we prefer more experienced candidates to pave the way.
You can reach me hugo at mytenten dot com, this position doesn't require Japanese.
We built our own hardware to control and interface with vending machines, doing
what the Web 2.0 did for Web. We’re truly full-stack so you can expect to see
Hardware/Firmware/IoT/Mobile/Web/Backend/Cellular/Bluetooth and others.
- Mobile developer(s): iOS and Android development native+non-native
- Server engineer: Backend focus on building API's mostly ruby based
- QA engineer: Find all the bugs the other positions are creating
- Senior QA engineer: Develop our QA team and improve feedback cycles
- FW developer: Work on our beacon powered by linux, (Linux development)
- Frontend developer: Take care of our frontends, mostly react based
- Devops engineer: For someone not afraid of a varied infrastructure
- PDM: Talk with our customers and help our teams deliver value (Japanese required)
- Don't see a position but still interested? Reach out anyway
We’re looking for go getters that enjoy taking ownership over problems and seeing
them driven to a solution, atm we prefer more experienced candidates to pave the way.
You can reach me hugo at mytenten dot com, we require Japanese only where mentioned.
Your problem with Vim is that you don't grok vi. [0]
I agree with you that if you don't use a specialist tool 24/7 you'll be slow, but that is expected vi optimizes for expert users not for novice users.
In the same way that if I don't use Photoshop and then just want to do something simple in it, it's going to take me a lot of time and am probably going to forget how to do it because I don't use it enough.
Just to validate then, these barely moving electrons will create a field that induces a current on the electrons on the other side of the wire that is 1m away, which would turn on the bulb, that if the lightbulb was an ideal current detector that ignores all other sources of electric fields?