Well, yeah, in my current on, but if it is new car with integrated tablet style infotainment you might not have place to put it and would have to look for something specifically made to fit it.
And might have A/C controls built into infotainment...
Not talking about suburban sprawl, just living next small city over.
But "tons of houses and not a shop or anything else in sight" is of course a problem on its own. Thankfully not really in my country, there is usually some local shops nearby everywhere
Well, it is a bit different. FSD theoretically can get driver into bad situation, then beep at them "I can't handle that", and as long as beeping was early enough that's no fault of Tesla even if the start of the event chain was caused by it.
Also Full Self Driving is extremely deceptive name for feature that does not do that
> I'll go a bit further... Do we really need computers on four wheels? Can't we just have simple electric vehicles without all the high-tech? No distracting screens, no computer for other than just governing the electric engine, no fancy car locks, and so on.
I'd love to, the problem is it would get some pitifully low NCAP rating (because lack of active securities would bring the score down and I remember it is && deal, so car can have excellent crash safety yet still get low stars coz of lack of the electronic toys), and manufacturers want to sell as much gadgets as possible, because every few bucks of extra electronics is every few dozen bucks they can charge customer for.
The other problem I think is that the "fancy annoying electronics" are probably not that big part of the price of the car. Add chassis, battery, heating/cooling system for the car and all the mechanics and you already arrived at most of the car's production price.
Like, even if you add $500 of the compute (amounting to mid-high range GPU) and $500 on ruggedizing it for car work... extra $1000 worth in electronics isn't all that much of car price.
I for one am keeping my 8th gen Civic Type-R for as long as possible, got ABS, airbags, even some traction control but none of the annoyances of modern cars. All I want from new car is android auto...
>I pretty like the idea of a superset of JSON that supports (1) comments, (2) trailing commas, (3) unquoted properties, (4) optional {} for the root object, (5) multi-line strings, (6) number separator.
You're 90% way there to YAML.
And YAML 1.2 cleaned up most of the annoying YAML edgecases too
They could if you parsed it into syntax tree wit some methods to access keys instead of parsing into native struct. I think I saw YAML parser doing it...
I think it is purely a technology problem. Discord software is good and for text/voice chat nothing really compares to the ease of use, features and ecosystem around it.
> 90% of everything is crap. In the case of chat, I think that's more like 99.9% of everything is crap.
Right but with 90% of everything crap you moved the 10% of good things into closed (for search results) system.
> If Twitter died tomorrow (not as unlikely as it was 6 months ago) then we'd still have a decent archive of the good tweets. All we'd lose is all the dross. The same is true for other platforms; the good stuff gets cross-posted and preserved.
Tweets are searchable and you can't archive.org discord chat easily. Terrible comparison and it is not same for other platforms.
Eh, that heavily depends on language and dataset you're working with. I've seen "simple" data with some fat thing like RoR on top of it having 10x the latency of the underlying database after all the ORMing.
80x25
> I set all my terminals to 22x23.
You are a very silly man and silliness should not be catered for.
> Will --help run a few quick ioctls to calculate screen size?
Your terminal can wrap text around just fine. If it can't, ask for refund.