Not to be pedantic, and I do appreciate the humor, but that’s not recursion either :3 Recursion doesn’t need to be endless. Recursive functions can absolutely have logical termination.
neatchee
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Homie, Au-197 is what’s being created, as stated in the screenshot, and it is the stable isotope of gold. It’s the naturally occurring one.
And the reaction doesn’t need to be especially stable on its own when it is a bonus byproduct of existing fusion reactor processes. The point is that we can take existing and new reactors, add this process, and immediately gain significantly extra value from the stuff we’re already doing.
it’s like hybrid electric cars that charge their batteries using the brakes. You’re already braking and losing a ton of energy as waste. ANY way to recapture and use that waste energy that yields more value than the materials required to capture it, is an immediate win.
The jewelry and investment industries make up 45-50% of gold consumption. Practical and industrial uses make up only 5-10%.
As such, while flooding the market with cheap gold would rapidly lower value, that’s unlikely to be how the gold is sold. If the amount of gold being generated from fusion reactors is orders of magnitude less than the global consumption rate from jewelry and investment, which seems likely, and they are selling at our near market value rather than trying to undercut everyone, then the value of the generated gold would remain relatively stable.
in other words, considering that the gold market generates something like $350bn USD per year, and the total market value of “above ground” gold around $25tn USD, even if fusion reactors generate $1bn USD worth of gold it would have a negligible impact on the price of gold while providing significant value to the reactor operators (incentivizing the growth of the fusion reactor industry)
Is this an illegal number?
Totally. The fact is, once a society is beyond intra-stellar travel, with craft that do not do atmospheric flight, there is little reason not to go full borg and have ships with no real forward-facing direction to speak of
I was making an admittedly weak reference to the death star trench run dialog. Not serious
Honestly I find these types of questions silly since we have no way to compare the efficiency and efficacy of the different weapon and shielding types, or other on board tech and countermeasures.
For all we know the falcon’s shields absorb phasers like they’re paper and its turret lasers eat the Enterprise’s shield at 5% per bolt. Or it could be the other way around. Not to mention this completely ignores tactics and strategy which is a huge part of it. The Falcon doesn’t do direct confrontation for a reason. Han is more likely to try to fake a surrender and then pull some shit once aboard for negotiations.
And if we’re just gonna say “Trek tech is more advanced than Wars tech” we can just end the discussion there 🤷♀️
neatchee@piefed.socialto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Do I have extreme anxiety?English
3·21 days agoNobody here can diagnose you, but what you’ve told us is more than enough to tell us you need to seek a professional opinion.
Find a psychiatrist who can see you ASAP about the anxiety, stress, panic attacks, etc
Find a physician who can see you ASAP about the migraines/headaches.
If either become worse or more frequent, seek immediate care at your local Urgent Care or ER.
Don’t gamble with your safety please ❤️🩹
Honestly an X-Wing would likely fare better than the Falcon. Proton torpedoes, and small enough to evade their
turbo lasersphasers
12 parsecs. 7 is impossible even with shortcuts through the ion storms
Not that I’m a proponent of capitalism as the default economic model (I’m very much not) but I dislike this particular argument because it misrepresent the function of capital.
Large projects require upfront investment that is beyond the means of individuals or even groups of individuals (e.g. 100 prospective tenants cannot afford to build and office building; you need someone able to front the equivalent of X years rental costs), and those investments need to be managed by specialists. Whether those specialists are independent or employed by a central governing body, you still need capital and you still need effective oversight to prevent corruption and exploitation.
What we need are guaranteed public offerings, with a rising baseline over time, that leave opportunity for capital investment in luxury upgrades. The guaranteed public offerings prevent gross exploitation by the capitalists, and the capital investments provide the innovation pressure and luxury offerings that incentivize those inclined to seek said luxuries without exploiting the public offering system to do it.
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Funny: Home of the Haha@lemmy.world•And they say customer service is in decline English
2·25 days agoYou know, most fun facts aren’t that fun. This one? Actually fun!
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Funny: Home of the Haha@lemmy.world•And they say customer service is in decline English
0·26 days ago🎶🎵I don’t want anybody else. When I think about you I ask an employee for assistance🎵🎶
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Op doesn't have time for interviewsEnglish
3·26 days agoAs I said, they care about how you think. Do you ask all these questions?
if I were given this interview question I would immediately start asking questions: Do I have my phone? Can I bring any objects into the room? Do I know the construction of the light? How far from the room is the light switch panel?
Asking “what are the limitations and conditions of this situation” is literally the thing they want to see. That’s my entire point.
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Op doesn't have time for interviewsEnglish
1·27 days agoThis is often exactly what the interview question is testing. Many of these questions are not about the solution but about how the applicant approaches problems
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•EU Chat Control didnt pass - proving the media got to alot of youEnglish
1·3 months agoit’s not going to for either of them
it never does lol
I’m feeling really prescient because I finally decided to sell most of my NVIDIA and gaming sector stock literally on Tuesday.
Though it turns out even today’s correction just brings us back to where we were earlier in the week, for the most part. We’ll see how things go Monday…
neatchee@piefed.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•EU Chat Control didnt pass - proving the media got to alot of youEnglish
15·3 months agoI work on software security (not it/infosec) and deal with this constantly. Bad stuff didn’t happen so we can scale back security, right? No, shit for brains, either the bad stuff didn’t happen because we prevented it, or the bad stuff just hasn’t happened yet because the vulnerability wasn’t discovered, or worse still, the bad stuff DID happen and we haven’t been informed yet. Either way, please do not make my job harder.






Logically terminating resources does not imply a terminating logic loop. Clever wordplay, though.
Recursion has a specific definition. It means solving a problem by breaking a process down into smaller and smaller self-similar pieces until reaching the “base case”. In programming, it (almost) always means a function that calls itself as part of its internal logic. Depending on what the function does and the conditions for returning a value from the function, it may do that one time, many times, or not at all. A classic example is the Boggle solver.
I did say I was being pedantic :P