Jokes on you, in Danish it is “Skildpadde”. “Padde” is toad, sure, but “skild” doesn’t really make any sense!
(Perhaps it is an ancient Danish word for shield (skjold), but no one would use it)
Jokes on you, in Danish it is “Skildpadde”. “Padde” is toad, sure, but “skild” doesn’t really make any sense!
(Perhaps it is an ancient Danish word for shield (skjold), but no one would use it)
Yes… Something like that…
I think you need to take the same approach as the British during WW2 with the Enigma. They could decrypt the messages and know when attacks would happen, but if they stopped every attack, the Nazis would know and change encryption device. So you need to accept that some people will die and only mitigate the disaster in small but impactful ways.
It is likely you are a bot, and then you get one it these regular captchas and the that will increase your score if you succeed.*
My restaurant just drags me out to pet the cow and I say thanks, pay them and go home.
Decetralise, hide, ban all water hoses
Fixed.
Look at me, I have free toilet paper at work.
From the Wikipedia page it seems that there are small outbreaks every year in the region of origin (India/Malaysia). It seems like the government is quite good at tracking down infected and potentially infected - which is lucky since the mortality rate is above 50%! I wonder what happens if one of the infected jumped on a plane to a completely different place in the world that was not so good at managing it.
I would like to share this with you: https://youtu.be/U0YW7x9U5TQ
I will need to try this!
And it actually works?
Let me take a stab at it:
Problem: Given two list of length n, find what elements the two list have in common. (we assume that there are not duplicates within a single list)
Naive solution: For each element in the first list, check if it appears in the second.
Bogo solution: For each permutation of the first list and for each permutation of the second list, check if the first item in each list is the same. If so, report in the output (and make sure to only report it once).
Sorry, we sold out of that 5 min before you walked in.
They came for the dogs first and now us
Well, I guess PDF has one thing going for it (which might not be relevant for scientific papers): The same file will render the same on any platform (assuming the reader implements all the PDF spec to the tee).
Would you say that it reads better as “not x” or “x not” (if we remove all special characters)?