At least with Linux I can choose to install and whenever I want to install it. I don't get that freedom with windows, and it packages it's system with advertisements
> The arctic will be policed by the American's and Russians
As it always has, because we don't have the millitary power or population to defend any of our own territory. The US does that for us. It's unfortunate Canadians have been unable to expand in our own territory over the few hundred years Europeans have been in this place.
> It's unfortunate Canadians have been unable to expand in our own territory over the few hundred years Europeans have been in this place.
Personally I disagree - I think it's fortunate that there are still large swaths of undeveloped natural territory in Canada, particularly the northern provinces. It might be cold up there, but it sure is beautiful.
I'm not who you asked, but I would say that yes, this is true, but it's also much better quality than similarly priced items from the US. Much better.
So it's actually true that we're flooded with cheap crap from China and that the production quality of those items is better than from elsewhere. (For the same price range.)
You can make a good workout in 15 minutes if you have time constraints. Lifting dumbbells is not the pinnacle of exercise. Do sprint-related things or other high intensity training. It's been proven to have as much of an effect as distance running, with the added benefit of increased metabolic rate and more muscle gain.
Many would argue the exact opposite, that OO is contraining and FP is much more free, allowing you to change your design model without having to redesign the entire model.
Honestly I'm not sure if OO is actually easier to understand than FP. I remember when I started programming it was a crappy but simple language called Turing that was procedural and had support for objects and pointers.
We weren't really taught classes in my high school course, so everything we did was entirely imperitive. I came across a problem where I had about 20 different entities in a game who all had a special way of updating during each tick, but I didn't want to have to write a switch statement for each one. I looked up "How to have an array of functions", and without knowing it at the time I was trying to implement first-class functions in this language which it just so happened to have.
From there it's easy to see how once you understand the concept of first class functions, many FP concepts start to fall in line, and by the way the language was set up it was difficult to use side-effects in this language, generally you use a function to output to the screen or to return a new resulting value. In fact when it finally came around to learning about classes, I had a very difficult time understanding how they worked or what purpose they served, made my Java classes in University difficult for some time.
I'm not sure what point I'm making here, I just thought how it was neat looking back that my first language I learned I naturally branched into more FP-oriented programming.
Huh. Just a thought, is there a point in the "whip" of the chain there where the overall curve of the lines approaches the same shape you get from i^i^i^i^i^i...(etc)?
idk dude. It's the same argument as pirating Game of Thrones. Most people when offered a convenient and safer channel would probably just pay for Game of Thrones, but many have no simple recourse other than paying out the ass for cable.
e.g. I live in Canada. Pretty sure HBO Go doesn't support Canada, and I'm sure as hell not wasting my money on cable TV just to see Game of Thrones. I'd rather pirate it. But if I can watch something on Netflix, obviously I'd rather just do that and pay for the service.
I only like the marvel shows cause they have interesting villains, and they all seem to actually be leading to something cool, they tie together neatly.
He is the largest youtuber, he has like 50M subscribers. Did a bit pretending to be a nazi that people took out of context alongside some other things, became a huge stupid controversy.