
Anyway I’ll probably hack together an implementation to see if it actually works like I think it does

Anyway I’ll probably hack together an implementation to see if it actually works like I think it does
The standards for eggs are really strict in Japan, eggs are so safe already that eating raw eggs is a commonly accepted practice.


I think the thing everyone is forgetting is that valve isn’t stupid, there’s no way they didn’t realize you could work around accepting the (legally unenforcable) NDA, and it’s open invite.
Valve 100% knows that keeping it “secret” is good for hype and was expecting this to happen at any time, and the nominal ban was expected, but nobody is gonna get sued either.
More people are talking about Valve’s “secret” new game because of this than would be if they openly announced it.


A quick Google search tells me that the term is outdated and no longer used, having been refuted by modern genetics research.


It is, can tell just by looking at it it’s a Rubik’s brand.
For various math reasons you only get consistent systems with 2^n dimensions, so after complex you get quaternions with 4, then the next one that works is 8, then 16, etc. They become less useful because you lose various useful features, like you lose commutabiliy with quaternions (eg ab != ba), and every time you double you lose more things.
Somehow people always forget that Ubisoft published Trackmania (2020). (Limited) F2p, one time purchase for Standard access, yearly sub for club access, which is isn’t even worth it if your not a dedicated player.
Yeah that’s just MDMA.


Thus the kingkiller chronicle was born.


Well the Greek alphabet, presumably we will get Beta and Gamma next.
This is actually the sandwich problem, which states there is exactly one slice that will split a sandwich of 3 elements into exactly 2 halves regardless of the shape or position of those elements. We don’t need the full proof, but the problem is continuous, so any desired ratio is possible, therefore you will always be able to slice an apple into exactly 1/3 and 2/3rds “good bits”, so a single slice will always be able to do the job.