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5 Comments and 9 Shares
The best case is O(n), and the worst case is that someone checks why.
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popular
3 days ago
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5 public comments
jlvanderzwan
3 days ago
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This joke was funnier 13 years ago when some anonymous weirdo invented "sleepsort"

https://web.archive.org/web/20151231221001/http://bl0ckeduser.github.io/sleepsort/sleep_sort_trimmed.html
macr0t0r
4 days ago
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Well...if you want determinate time...
bcs
3 days ago
while true: pass
Groxx
4 days ago
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It's good to let your computer rest occasionally, to avoid burnout
Silicon Valley, CA
GaryBIshop
4 days ago
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I love it that it is Python!
edquartett2
4 days ago
It's not Python 😉 "length()" is just "len()" and functions begin with "def"
alt_text_bot
4 days ago
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The best case is O(n), and the worst case is that someone checks why.

Making Tea

8 Comments and 12 Shares
No, of course we don't microwave the mug WITH the teabag in it. We microwave the teabag separately.
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fxer
11 days ago
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You can’t microwave water, it will be polluted with radiation! Do you really want your kids exposed to electromagnetic waves?
Bend, Oregon
popular
12 days ago
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Covarr
11 days ago
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I put my strongest small ceramic bakeware in the toaster oven, filled with water. Sometimes you just gotta do things slow and appreciate life. Not like you'll be appreciating the tea; it's still not ready yet.
East Helena, MT
sommerfeld
12 days ago
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It's not that 110V kettles are less efficient at turning electricity to heat than 240V - they're just less powerful. UK kettles draw up to 3 kilowatts, while ones in the US max out at around half that.
zwol
12 days ago
And that's directly related to the voltage difference. In both countries, electric kettles have to be designed on the assumption that they can pull only 13 to 15 amps of load from the mains. This puts a hard limit on the wattage rating — but wattage is volts times amps, so the higher UK supply voltage makes higher power kettles possible. Microwave ovens, on the other hand, are typically powered by 20-amp dedicated circuits in the USA, so they can be higher power than kettles at the same supply voltage. I don't know how they're wired in the UK.
bcs
12 days ago
@zwol FWIW, I've never seen a microwave with a 20A plug.
zwol
11 days ago
@bcs I'm not sure about this but I have the impression that it's OK per US electrical code to use a NEMA 15 socket on a 20A circuit *as long as it's a dedicated circuit*, and this is one of the reasons why 20A plugs are so rare on US kitchen appliances. That said, something else is also going on, because I just checked and my microwave is rated at 17kW, which is 14.2 amps at 120V, but I can't find any electric kettle for sale that goes higher than 1.5kW (12.5A at 120V). Possibly the real concern here is that a kettle *can't* assume a dedicated circuit, so the designers have to leave some headroom in case there are lamps or something plugged into the same circuit.
bcs
11 days ago
@zwol you can 100% put a lower amp outlet on a higher amp circuit, and you don't need it to be dedicated. (It's the same as plugging an 8A lamp cord into a 15A socket; the load is responsible for protecting it's own cord.) In fact, 20A wires and 15A sockcts are very common. What you can't do is sell an appliance that draw more than 15A but plugs into a 15A socket.
PeterParslow
1 day ago
Microwaves in the UK: all the ones I've seen (Brit living here 50+ years) are simply plugged into a 13 amp socket, like the kettle is. They're normally rated 1 kW, but some make it to 1.2kW.. Cookers (oven, hob) are usually wired into a separate 45 amp circuit.
jgbishop
12 days ago
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I'll admit to microwaving the mug and tea bag. It works well for me!
Durham, NC
rraszews
12 days ago
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What's weird is when you get into the details. Apparently American electric kettles are much slower than British ones (British people keep telling me it takes 30 seconds to boil water in an electric kettle; mine takes 5 minutes) while American microwaves are much faster (Again, takes 90 seconds in mine; they claim it takes 10 minutes). (There is some truth here; electric kettles are less efficient using American 110 mains voltage, not sure why British microwaves are so weak though)
Columbia, MD
fallinghawks
12 days ago
Consider getting a newer kettle. I (US) bought a Krups 1L earlier this year. It takes 2.5 minutes to boil 2 cups of water, which gives my microwave a run for its money. It's probably also using less electricity too.
jakar
11 days ago
Haven't researched this, but I'm willing to bet that an industrial 240V kettle exists somewhere here in America, and that I could theoretically run a new circuit easily enough to accommodate it. However, I also don't care enough to actually make it happen.
bootsofdoom
12 days ago
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Ah, Americans. Literally nobody "makes it in a kettle". You boil the water in a kettle and make the tea in a teapot. Obviously.
PeterParslow
1 day ago
If we extend "kettle" to include saucepans, then the Indian approach is to put everything (tea, milk, sugar, some spices) into a pan and boil it for a while
bootsofdoom
7 hours ago
Yes, and I love a nice chai with condensed milk. But in the UK context that is not what a kettle is.
jlvanderzwan
12 days ago
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What about microwaving the crown jewels?
alt_text_bot
12 days ago
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No, of course we don't microwave the mug WITH the teabag in it. We microwave the teabag separately.

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Poetry

3 Comments and 11 Shares


Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
Anyone who thinks AI endangers poets should first prove that there exists a poetry journal with more readers than contributors.


Today's News:
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tante
24 days ago
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"But average people like AI poetry better than real one"
Berlin/Germany
acdha
23 days ago
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Washington, DC
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24 days ago
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Hanezz
21 days ago
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AI poetry mostly leans towards clarity. Its simplicity is both its strength and its limitation. That's why it sometimes far surpasses human-authored works in perceived quality.
GaryBIshop
24 days ago
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This is great!

Arizona Chess

2 Comments and 7 Shares
Sometimes, you have to sacrifice pieces to gain the advantage. Sometimes, to advance ... you have to fall back.
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satadru
30 days ago
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Re: Falling back...

“We've made too many compromises already; too many retreats. They invade our space and we fall back. They assimilate entire worlds and we fall back. Not again. The line must be drawn here! This far, no further! And *I* will make them pay for what they've done!”
New York, NY
popular
29 days ago
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macr0t0r
32 days ago
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This might be the only true use for DST.

The Future of Orion

2 Comments and 15 Shares
Dinosaur Cosmics
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JayM
36 days ago
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Hahaha.
Atlanta, GA
popular
36 days ago
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fancycwabs
36 days ago
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Nashville, Tennessee
jepler
36 days ago
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Earth, Sol system, Western spiral arm
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marcrichter
36 days ago
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🔥
tbd

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Flawed

2 Comments and 7 Shares


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Hovertext:
This could be the greatest school play of all time if anyone out there had the guts to do it.


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fxer
53 days ago
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You’ll notice it doesn’t say anything about flavor or texture.
Bend, Oregon
popular
52 days ago
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hannahdraper
53 days ago
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Washington, DC
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jlvanderzwan
52 days ago
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I really would love to try a cultivar of Red Delicious from before WW2, because apparently all the things we hate about it were introduced by selective breeding from the 1950s onwards. But I never heard of any of the original breeds surviving anywhere.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Delicious
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