@unnick@wetdry.world cover

17 year old beepbooper, coder, math enjoyer, SS rank tetr.io player. also interested in processor design, electronics, and engineering in general. every 13 billion years do art and music stuff

i boost often so you might want to hide boosts if you follow me, or use https://justmytoots.com/@[email protected] if you just want to browse my boring shitposts for some reason

feel free to ask me for help with math or computer graphics stuff! i can do it for you and possibly even explain stuff if im not too bad at that part

mi soweli ilo :3
sometimes :therian:

"cool robot furry :3" - @atom

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nixCraft , to random
@nixCraft@mastodon.social avatar

As a developer, what one thing would you never admit to anyone? 🤔

unnick ,
@unnick@wetdry.world avatar

@nixCraft

  1. i used to keep my passwords in text files in a folder, unencrypted
  2. i dont regularly make backups
pervognsen , (edited ) to random
@pervognsen@mastodon.social avatar

How much RAM do you have in your dev workstation/laptop?

unnick ,
@unnick@wetdry.world avatar

@pervognsen 16gb on my desktop, 4gb on my laptop. 4gb is usable but definitely annoying, i would really like having 8gb on it. 16gb is far less important than 8gb but its nice to have the free memory for reduced swapping and random computational experiments

demofox , to random
@demofox@mastodon.gamedev.place avatar

I woke up and had a sleepy brain idea that uncountable infinities were uncountable because they were multi dimensional.
For instance, a real number being a 1d integer part plus another 1d decimal part.
Has anyone seen this thought before?
Am I wrong to assume that the space between two integers is a countable infinity?

unnick ,
@unnick@wetdry.world avatar

@demofox every single real interval is uncountably large
hand-wavey proof: if the interval isnt open, do some hilberts hotel style trickery to map it into an open interval, then remap the interval to (-1,1), then apply the transformation x -> x/(1-x2). this forms a bijection between the interval and the reals which means they both have the same size
example of the hilbert hotel trickery i had in mind: you can map [0;1) to (0;1) by mapping 0 to 0.5, 0.5 to 0.75, 0.75 to 7/8, etc

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