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And then there was me who slept all weekend like a lazy dog in one of the hotels in Shinjuku.
You have just been Sharapova'd.
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I vaguely recall a time when I slept all weekend. Very vaguely.
How long are you visiting? I wish there were more CPians here, we could hold a meetup then.
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Indivara wrote: we could hold a meetup then Oh, I wish we could, but unfortunately I am leaving on Friday evening and don't think will be able to get any time off in the middle of the week.
You have just been Sharapova'd.
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Mandatory check: are you still in the same country? some times it happens that people get abducted when leaving a tunnel through fog...
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Joan Murt wrote: are you still in the same country universe?
Happened all the time on Twilight Zone...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Well I didn't see any Perfectly Normal Beasts, so I guess I'm still here in the same old universe.
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You may have to wait for the next migration: they came through a couple of weeks ago. Good eating!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Just remember to jump on them if you start seeing them... of course only after preparing some sandwiches for the travel...
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Fog is not so uncommon here, but still most people do not know how to deal with it. We have a brighter rear lght for that purpose. It's quite annying for those driving behind you, so you are supposed to turn it on when the visibility is very low and when nobody is behind you. This way anyone coming up behind you is warned by this bright red light and once you notice headlights behind you, you should turn it off. And what do most people do? Turn it on at the slightest hint of fog or rain, and leave it on when someone is driving after them. Some even turn it on after someone has already come up from behind and sucessfully avoided crashing into them.
It happens every year, jst like there always be snow in winter, yet most people drive like they have never seen this before.
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a f***ing golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?"
"You mean like from space?"
"No, from Canada."
If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.
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People are usually denser than fog
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Sander Rossel wrote: People are usually denser than fog
Now you just "NAILED IT"
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Indivara wrote: I guess this is quite ordinary in London? I don't think London has seen fog since about 1957.
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Gor blimey, mister, we ain't seen a proper peasouper since that Clean Air Act awright but there's still been fog. We're right on top of a bleedin' river, ain't we?
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Yes, I realized how stupid that sounded after posting it. Plenty of other countries have fog, it is just the stereotype from what I've read. London = rain and fog, California = sunshine (not the CP variety) etc
Why 1957 in particular?
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Indivara wrote: I've read. London = rain and fog, I've read. Japan = Samurai warriors and peasants!
We have less rain than many countries these days; it is hot (26C) and dry as I type this.
Indivara wrote: Why 1957 in particular? It was round about then that the government banned the use of coal (and other dirty fuels) for domestic use, thus reducing the pollution in the air and the resulting smog(smoke filled fog) in the winter. The overall weather patterns and infrastructure also began to change which affected the amount of fog produced.
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It has been almost that thick here since yesterday in Vancouver BC. Unfortunately due to the smoke from all the forest fires this year...
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That is terrible. I was over there this time last year and the air was beautiful and clean. Although not quite as clean as when I was travelling there between 1963 and '65.
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I get a two week head start on this problem.
The flight leaves at a very early hour.
Realistically, I'll have to leave my home around 04:00 local (four in the morning) to make it.
On normal days, I awaken around 07:00
The last time I needed to make an early flight, the power went zero right smack dab in the middle of my shower.
Result: Missed flight // Me the big fool
I'm telling you, that was a solarbanite day.
The suggestion has been made that I just stay up all night, get a shower at 03:00, and drive to the airport and sleep in the terminal and on the plane.
Anybody got a better idea ?
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How many time zones are you going to be crossing and in what direction? Can you not forego the shower or is it meant to wake you up more than clean you?
What you really need is a nice strong man to lift you sleeping from your bed, transfer you to the airport, check you in and carry you on to the flight all without waking you but I don't suppose you know anyone that would do it!
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When I came back from Germany, I stayed overnight in St Louis. I had a dream that I missed my flight and was running through the airport try to catch it. Woke up then. Scared me so bad I stayed up the extra 5 hours.
But that was before the days where we had cell phones that had alarms built into them....
You can lead a developer to CodeProject, but you can't make them think.
The Theory of Gravity was invented for the sole purpose of distracting you from investigating the scientific fact that the Earth sucks.
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Man up.
Prepare something light you can get into as soon as you wake up (caffeinated if that's your thing - but just enough to get you to the airport). Ensure you have all your stuff ready to go, then just set your alarm at 3:30, wake, shower, eat or drink whatever you prepared, get in the car and go.
You eat at the airport or on the plane. Sleep on the plane (not at the gate, blissfully sleeping as your plane rolls out). Hit the coffee at whatever is your normal time and get on with it. You'll be totally fine for the morning, a little rough mid afternoon, and so plan an early night.
Staying up all night is a bad idea: you'll be useless the next day. If you're crossing lots of timezones and you're spending the day on a plane then maybe that would work for you, but ensure you get the times right otherwise you'll just make it worse.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Depending on how long your flight will be, you will be quite dead when you arrive. Sleeping at the terminal either will make you feel even worse or et you miss your flight.
As an old soldier, I would have everything packed and ready. When the alarm (clock, not the sarge anymore ) goes off, I jump into the shower, then jump into my clothes, grab my stuff and off I go. I am still used to doing that in complete darkness, but I still have some of those.[^]
Hamid: What's that?
Rambo: It's blue light.
Hamid: What does it do?
Rambo: It turns blue.
Who said you can't learn anything useful from watching Rambo?
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a f***ing golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?"
"You mean like from space?"
"No, from Canada."
If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.
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That was my Monday morning every week for three years, I know this game.
Rules are:
- Sunday have a good lunch and only light dinner.
- As per Chris, get everything ready before you go to bed.
- I always showered before bed, but whatever tickles you is fine.
- Go to bed in good time, you can nip off two hours from a normal nights sleep if you must but get to bed in good time.
- I used one, but maybe have two alarms.
- Aim to be active and fast, but not rushed, from when you get up. I used to be up, dressed and out of the door inside ten minutes.
- When you get to the airport, checked in and air side then you can relax a bit. Make sure you know where the gate is and then get a good coffee and try to relax.
veni bibi saltavi
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In accordance with lounge rules "discussing anything in a software developer's life that takes your fancy except programming questions", here's a request for feedback on a time dilation example -
The movie Interstellar includes examples of time dilation.
My objective is to be able to provide a simple explanation and example of time dilation.
Is my link below a good time dilation example or does it require correction or more clarification?
http://www.oproot.com/a/nav/if/time-dilation.html[^]
To access via mobile device, go to oproot.com > experiments > time dilation example
Position and time were once thought to be absolute. Newton's laws of motion discredit absolute position in space. Einstein's theory of relativity discredits absolute time. The time dilation effect comes from the nature of spacetime.
Time and space are now seen as dynamic quantities with each individual particle, or planet, having its own unique measure of time depending on where and how each is moving.
- The Illustrated A Brief History of Time, Stephen Hawking, Page 45
In the example link, there are 4 observers with 4 synchronized clocks. 2 observers are on the surface of the earth. 1 observer is in space above the earth. 1 observer has returned from a high-speed space mission.
When regrouping the clocks are different -
Observer 1 surface clock is 12:25. (O1)
Observer 2 surface clock is 12:25. (O2)
Astronaut 1 clock is 12:28. (A1)
Astronaut 2 clock is 12:21. (A2)
Extra credit question -
Are there any science experiment ideas (on a budget) that can be performed to demonstrate time dilation?
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