I hereby claim:
- I am pjstein on github.
- I am pjstein (https://keybase.io/pjstein) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASB5qGvrz1Y35qNvbLd0FNpYzdO9qs-DZ-syLy3n4vc4Wgo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
aws-mfa-print-info() | |
{ | |
echo "We've set your credentials in this shell" | |
echo "Generated at: '${EPHEMERAL_TOKEN_GENERATED_AT}'" | |
echo "These credentials are valid for *12 hours*" | |
unset EPHEMERAL_TOKEN_GENERATED_AT | |
} |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
This document is written for both the machine learning community and the Swift programming language design community, with a strong focus on language design.
### JHW 2018 | |
import numpy as np | |
import umap | |
# This code from the excellent module at: | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4643647/fast-prime-factorization-module | |
import random |
/* | |
* Easing Functions - inspired from http://gizma.com/easing/ | |
* only considering the t value for the range [0, 1] => [0, 1] | |
*/ | |
EasingFunctions = { | |
// no easing, no acceleration | |
linear: function (t) { return t }, | |
// accelerating from zero velocity | |
easeInQuad: function (t) { return t*t }, | |
// decelerating to zero velocity |
#!/bin/bash | |
set -ev | |
SWIFT_SNAPSHOT="swift-2.2-SNAPSHOT-2016-01-06-a" | |
echo "Installing ${SWIFT_SNAPSHOT}..." | |
curl -s -L -O "https://swift.org/builds/ubuntu1404/${SWIFT_SNAPSHOT}/${SWIFT_SNAPSHOT}-ubuntu14.04.tar.gz" | |
tar -zxvf "${SWIFT_SNAPSHOT}-ubuntu14.04.tar.gz" | |
sudo mv "${SWIFT_SNAPSHOT}-ubuntu14.04" /swift | |
echo "Installing XCTest..." |
NB. This was recovered from some cache somewhere in the digital ether. I
need to look over it and dig into the history presented here someday. -PJ$, 12.30.2013
ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN : The Dartmouth Independent
TITLE : The Arguably Definitive History of Pong
AUTHOR : Anoop Rathod
PUBLISHED : Sep 19, 2005
Founded in 1769, Dartmouth College has withstood the travails of history to remain one of this country's finest academic institutions with a strong set of time-honored
# Compiled source # | |
################### | |
*.com | |
*.class | |
*.dll | |
*.exe | |
*.o | |
*.so | |
*.pyc |
All in all, Jonathan Delano Salinger’s “The Catcher in the Rye” is a volume of enormous import to American literature. Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of English Words defines “catcher” as, “someone or something that catches something,” while it defines “rye” as, “a hardy annual grass that is widely grown for grain and as a cover crop.” But that is not the novel’s only point of contrast! Indeed, “The Catcher and the Rye” is a puzzle — a pile of amorphous cardboard pieces that through determined study you may put together (assuming, of course, there is a way to fit all of the pieces together). But puzzles — like people, like life — are not meant to be solved. They intrigue. They inspire. They are meaningless diversions. “Life is a game, boy,” Spencer says — for games are more fun than puzzles. And were he honest he would add, “Welcome to the games! Be merry, be miserable, take heart or lose it. Get drunk, make mistakes. Work hard, race the rats. Everything and nothing is here for your enjoyment. Everything and no
# NB. This affront to reason mocks our beliefs in everything save chaos and death. | |
# May whatever you call Holy forgive you, the damned, who read further | |
# than this point. You have been warned. But if you scorn this warning, if | |
# your contempt for these my dying words is so complete that you read on, | |
# if you still believe that there is something good or right or just in this world, | |
# then I will meet you, smiling, with hot tears in my eyes, when you join me in the | |
# black and brackish pit, the Hell below Hell, where I now go. |