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where <identifier> is the name of the type for which the constructor is defined. <modifiers> is optional, and must be an accessibility level or the keyword extern. If unspecified, a constructor is assigned the default accessibility level of the containing declarative scope. Multiple complementary modifiers may be specified. <parameters> is optional, and specifies one or more parameters for the constructor. These are identical to method parameters. <initializer> is optional, and specifies another instance constructor to invoke before this instance constructor is executed. This has the form base(<args>) or this(<args>), where <args> specifics zero or more arguments for the constructor to invoke. The base keyword form invokes an instance constructor in the base class, while the this keyword form invokes another instance constructor in the same object. <statements> is the block of statements associated with the constructor. The following code shows some examples of constructors as might be provided for a Fraction class:
public class Fraction { private static readonly int Unit; // This a lame example of a static constructor static Fraction() { Unit = 1; } private long _num; private long _den; // Instance constructors public Fraction(long top, long bottom) { _num = top; _den = bottom; } public Fraction(long number) : this(number, 1) { } . . . }
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In password-based systems, this consists of requiring longer and more difficult-to-remember passwords, while steadfastly refusing to recognize partial matches With authentication devices, this consists of using longer base secrets and ensuring that authenticators are long and varied enough to resist offline attacks Another fundamental strategy is to limit the number of guesses: If someone provides a series of authenticators, none of which are correct, the authentication system should sound the alarm that an attack may be in progress In many cases, systems restrict the number of successive failed matches on the assumption that the legitimate user would eventually match, while an attacker would continue trying unsuccessfully In biometric systems, we reduce the risk of trial-and-error attacks by pursuing a lower FAR (or FMR) Two strategies are used for doing this First, the system can be designed to use additional information from the biometric sensor, which involves constructing a more complicated authenticator and a more sophisticated verification procedure A second approach is adjusting how closely an authenticator must match a verifier We can increase the FAR by tightening the match Unfortunately, this second approach may impact the usability of the system by causing it to reject too many legitimate matches The FAR captures errors in which the system accepts illegitimate matches; for example, the wolf in sheep s clothing just got into the sheep pasture A corresponding measure called the false rejection rate (FRR) or false non-match rate (FNMR) captures the rate at which the system incorrectly rejects legitimate matches; for example, the sheep just got denied entry to the sheep pasture An effective biometric system should have a low FRR as well as a low FAR If the FRR is too high, legitimate users won t be able to log in to the system reliably or get access to what they should be able to access The sheep will soon become highly frustrated with its inability to access the pasture.
Destructor A destructor is a member that implements the actions required to destroy an instance of a class. The destructor for a class may be invoked any time after the instance is no
longer accessible by any code. Any destructors for inherited classes are invoked at this time as well. A destructor is declared as follows:
The model is definitely wrong in some way Back to the drawing board Hopefully only slight changes are needed
~ <identifier>() { <statements> }
While there is no way to prevent the replication of passwords, a number of techniques can reduce the risk of replicating authentication devices and biometric traits If an authentication device already uses base secrets and authenticators that are strong enough to resist trial-and-error attack, the remaining problem is to prevent attackers from extracting a device s secrets Commercial tokens and smart cards incorporate a number of techniques to prevent replication, though these techniques do not always deter an attacker who has access to a good laboratory4 Countermeasures for biometric replication depend on the type of biometric data being collected A common strategy is to incorporate liveness information: the measurement of traits or behaviors that aren t present if an attacker presents a static copy of a biometric trait For example, some fingerprint readers
asp net core barcode scanner, barcode scanner uwp app, .net core barcode generator, .net core qr code generator<eot>Though there are films that are just scary enough to scar us for life, there are others made specifically for children that create that same effect.
Some days ago I went to the cinema with my nieces. While we were in the line to buy popcorn, we were talking about the movie posters of the films the theatre was showing. Among them was obviously the new version of It and the eldest asked me if I had already seen it. She’s about to turn 9 and told me she wanted to see the film but that her parents had told her she was still too young for it. I agreed, but then I started thinking that I was younger than her when I watched the original version and many other classic horror films. Although they did traumatize me for life, I really enjoyed watching them. I just told her it was probably for the best to watch the animated film we were there to watch. If not, she would have screamed out of fear when seeing the movie. This made me think of all those movies that really scarred me, and I was surprised to see that not all of them were actually horror films. So, with that in mind, here are 10 of those movies that took me so long to re-watch out of fear of opening a box of trauma I had buried deep in my mind.
Well, we had to start with this movie about the clown who was probably the protagonist of millions of nightmares. Now, to be honest, I preferred the latest version in almost all aspects (except for the actor who plays Pennywise; I mean Tim Curry is the best) but I still remember how traumatized I was after watching what was presented as a two-part TV series at the time. His hideous costume, bright red hair, and his fearsome pointy teeth got stuck in my mind for many years.
On the same page, Chucky basically did the same. What was wrong with me? I watched this one and the many sequels it has years after, and I still felt those goosebumps and irrational fears I had when I was a kid. I still don’t understand why I kept watching these films when they clearly didn't leave a positive mark in my psyche. Every time I see a picture of this diabolical doll, I can’t help but cringe and look away out of fear of it coming to live… and no, I’m not kidding.
Now, this isn’t even close to being a horror film, but it was definitely a nightmare fuel. Let aside the creepy Oompa Loompas with their orange skin and their weird green hair and brows, no offense to dearly beloved Gene Wilder, but his rendition of Willy Wonka shouts "pervert" out loud. Now, if that wasn’t enough, with all those psychedelic effects and disturbing songs, the only thing I could think about is how lucky I was for not getting a golden ticket.
And thus we arrive at my worst nightmare. When they released the remastered version of the film my cousin sneaked me to the movie theatre… Worst idea ever! I remembered I had to watch The Rugrats for weeks to fall asleep. It wasn’t really the fact that the girl was possessed that really scare me, but those flashy images of the devil gave me months of sleepless nights.
And speaking of nightmares, that bastard pizza-like-faced dude with knives for hands, and a stripped shirt was definitely a recurrent protagonist of those bad dreams. Though it was nice to find out years later that Johnny Depp was in the film, it took me a lot of years to be able to watch not the entire film, but just some scenes. The funny thing about these classic horror films is that, now that I’ve been able to watch them recently, I just laugh about the special effects of the time, but the memory of how scared I was still makes me shiver.
In a completely opposite type of films, let’s talk about this particularly traumatizing movie. I bet most of you can agree with me in that more than being a heartfelt children’s film, it’s one of the scariest pieces ever made. I mean, the scene with the pink elephants is creepy enough to scar a child for life. Add that heartbreaking scene where they lock Dumbo’s mom, and you get a guaranteed season in therapy.
Without any doubt, Stephen King has crowned himself as the master of horror, and it that's well-deserved if you ask me. Among his many classic stories, it’s probably Carrie the one that freaked me out the most. Don’t get me wrong, I actually liked that movie. The casting was so good that the actress really delivered some creepy faces, but what struck me the most was the disturbing and mad mother with her religious fanaticism. To be honest, it still gets me everytime I watch it.
Oh, those lovely, and not at all scary, Furby-like creatures (well, probably the inspiration was the other way around) that change form when fed after midnight and reproduce with the touch of a single drop of water. Well, I guess I now understand why I found Furby’s so disturbing.
I know some of you might be wondering, what’s wrong with this movie and why I included it on the list? But let me be honest with you, I never enjoyed what many consider one of Jim Carrey’s best performances. On the contrary, I had to strengthen myself whenever my tedious cousin wanted to watch it almost every freaking weekend because I just couldn’t stand looking at this crazy character. Don’t make me go to the part where the dog accidentally puts the mask on…. Seriously, I have goosebumps right now.
Well, now let’s go to one that many can include on their personal list. Raise your hand if you were scared of even getting into the tub after watching Jaws. I know it’s not very likely that such a gigantic creature would swim that close to the seaside, but it really took me quite long to be able to get into the water, and I must say that swimming in the ocean is one of my favorite activities in life.
In a similar kind fear, but more irrational and kind of stupid, I remember how panicked I was anytime I saw some random amber jewelry because I thought it might have dinosaur DNA on it, and if that it ended in the wrong hands (in my mind, an evil scientist that had watched the film and wanted to copy the idea), it could bring back those mighty and destructive beings. Don't laugh at me. I was three when it was released, and I was probably five when I first watched it. Well, but I also have a very serious and irrational fear of gorillas, so yes, you’re entitled to laugh at me.
As a normal kid in the nineties, you can probably relate to me with some of these movies, and with others, it’s probably just me and my irrational fears. Still, you can’t deny that there are films that might not really belong to the horror genre that will always haunt you (and I didn’t even mention Mufasa’s death or when Bambi’s mother is killed by a hunter). But going back to what I mentioned about my niece, it's not only those classic films that can produce those scars. Perhaps in a couple of years, her generation will remember Toy Story 3 as one of those traumatizing films ever made. We all have a personal list that will always remind us of that gullible and innocent time of our lives.<eot>Mississippi Chronicles: Laura Van Overschelde - Mississippi Chronicles
Laura Van Overschelde, chairman of the Mississippi Tea Party, told Breitbart News that Hill is "adamant." "Senator Hill has been a great and fully determined leader to expose Common Core for what it is," Van Overschelde said, "a fully top-down, one- size-fits-all effort, to indoctrinate our children for the purposes of developing a global workforce, completely separated from traditional American values."
Jan 27, 2015: NewsMs: Miss. Tea Party Shows Support for Vaccine Choice Bill
According to Mississippi Tea Party Chairman Laura Van Overschelde, the bill goes hand and hand with one of the Tea Party's basic principles of having a "Constitutionally Limited Government. She also accuses the Mississippi Department of health for exercising "inordinate pressure on physicians and clinics to heavy vaccination schedules, sometimes in contradiction to prudent "best practices."
Jan 13, 2015: Z-Mississippi: Speaker Laura Van Overschelde at Stop Common Core Rally Ms. Tea Party 1-7-14
Jan 10, 2015: Youtube: Speaker Laura Van Overschelde at Stop Common Core Rally Ms. Tea Party 1-7-14
Speaker Laura Van Overschelde at Stop Common Core Rally Ms. Tea Party 1-7-14
Jan 7, 2015: Laura Van Overschelde: Freedom Works: Mississippi Rally AGAINST Common Core
Oct 27, 2014: Z-News Mississippi: Mississippi Tea Party Chairman Laura Van Overschelde: The Ms Supreme Court has embarrassed itself, confused itself,
obfuscated the public, played hopscotch with its own rulings, and has defamed the rule of law.
May 28, 2014: Slate: Media Try to Ask Tea Party Activists About Mississippi Scandal. Tea Party Won't Have It.
Laura Van Overschelde, a fellow Tea Partier, took the mic from Nicholson. "The press is supposed to be the Fourth Estate," she intoned. "It is your responsibility, it is your job, to report what is important to every Mississippian. Not some sensational story you might be interested in!"<eot>Anniversaries April 9, 2000 | Lubbock Online | Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Mr. and Mrs. Miguel Tijerina of Lubbock celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday with Mass at Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church, followed by a reception and dance at Crystal's Night Club. Their children hosted the event. They are the parents of Stella T. Reyes, Gloria T. Guerrero, Elvia T. Hernandez, Annie T. Hernandez, Elizabeth T. Maldonado, Orlando Tijerina, Irosema T. Guerrero, Niria T. DeLeon, and Miguel Tijerina Jr., all of Lubbock, and Delia Tijerina of Grand Prairie. Tijerina and the former Maria Gonzales were married March 25, 1950, in Edinburg. They have 35 grandchildren and 42 great-grandchildren.
MR. AND MRS. BESSENT
Mr. and Mrs. W. Wayne Bessent celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday with a reception at the Parkview Place apartments. Their family hosted the event. They are the parents of Michael and Cathy Bessent of Anchorage, Alaska, and Donna and Tim Stroud of Bonham. Bessent and the former Roberta M. McGowen were married April 8, 1950, in Lubbock. They have six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
MR. AND MRS. RETTIG
Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Rettig of Lubbock celebrated their 50th Wedding anniversary April 1 with a family dinner at Barcelona Court. Their daughters and sons-in-law hosted the event. They are the parents of Don and Linda Stringer of Lubbock, Leslie and Greg Quarles of Kansas City, Kan., Kim and Lisa Hoopes of San Antonio and Ted and Laura Wiley of Lubbock. Rettig and the former Lareta Maner were married April 8, 1950, in Clovis, N.M. They have nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Junior Jackson of Lubbock celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday with a dinner at the 50-Yard Line Restaurant. Their children hosted the event. They are the parents of Donna Locke and Anita Webb, both of Lubbock, and Wes Jackson of Ruidoso, N.M. Jackson and the former Annie Lou Cates were married April 9, 1950, in Lubbock. They have six grandchildren.
MR. AND MRS. HALEY
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Haley of Lubbock celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Friday. They are the parents of Darlann Dickinson and Denny Haley, both of Lubbock. Haley and the former Mildred Lane were married April 7, 1940, in Clovis, N.M. They have two grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Turner Hunter of Floydada celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Friday with a family dinner. Their children hosted the event. They are the parents of Larry and Ruth Ann Hunter and Barbara McCormick, all of Lubbock, and the late Audry McCormick. Hunter and the former Sarah Eilon Campbell were married April 7, 1940, in Jayton. They have six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
DELIA TIJERINA SAN ANTONIO MIGUEL TIJERINA KANSAS YARD LINE RESTAURANT AUDRY MCCORMICK 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY NIRIA T. DELEON KANSAS CITY HUNTER ELVIA T. HERNANDEZ ANCHORAGE ANNIE T. HERNANDEZ SARAH EILON CAMPBELL GLORIA T. GUERRERO DONNA LOCKE DENNY HALEY MICHAEL BESSENT IROSEMA T. GUERRERO GREG QUARLES<eot>Do you like silly browser toys with a tangential link to games?
Posts 8,039 Do you like silly browser toys with a tangential link to games?
This is a bit cheeky as I've already posted this into the Steam Greenlight thread - but that thread is almost 30 pages or 'heated debate' so I'm guessing a lot of people won't be keeping-up with it?
So, anyway, in an effort to show that you can make voting games onto Steam a lot more interesting than Valve are doing, I created a very silly thing I'm calling the "Wobbly Tower Voting System" - with apologies to World of Goo - you can see it here
http://www.shrewdlogarithm.com/voter
It's meant to be a bit of fun and also to show-off the clever things HTML5 allows us to do in the browser - that's a proper Box2D physics engine (as seen in a certain game involving birds!) we've got there although I'd been used for more impressive stuff I'm sure :)
I'd really like any and all feedback I can get on it - e.g. I'd like you all to be guinea pigs with your various browsers and platforms - you don't have to make a serious effort at voting for anything, you can just try to break it if you like (won't be too hard!)
Note: I'm not really expecting it to work on a smartphone or even a smaller tablet because, if for no other reason, there's a LOT of information going on there - but by all means give it a whirl and send me the error messages :)
Reply With Quote 26-09-2012, 01:58 PM
Posts 1,156 I had one of my blocks fall through the floor but was able to pull it back out as part of the chain. Looks like placing a block at all assigns a score of at least 1, meaning that if you don't like the game you shouldn't use it as a block. Will global scores be calculated based on relative local scores? That is, does someone really have to build a gigantic tower to put their favorite game on top, or can they just place a single block for their favorite game and leave it at that?
Note: I'm not really expecting it to work on a smartphone or even a smaller tablet
It actually works just fine on an iPad 3 with Safari, though it's not exactly fast. Chrome is predictably slower (it can't use the special Javascript VM), but it still works.
It's even slower on my Galaxy Nexus, but it does work! Dragging games from the list is very laggy, but the physics engine seems reasonably smooth.
Last edited by TillEulenspiegel; 26-09-2012 at 02:38 PM.
Posts 8,039 Originally Posted by icupnimpn2
Looks like placing a block at all assigns a score of at least 1, meaning that if you don't like the game you shouldn't use it as a block.
That's pretty-much my feeling - but the whole 'weight of vote' thing is something I've not really decided as-yet - we could certainly make "0" count for something over nothing.
Will global scores be calculated based on relative local scores? That is, does someone really have to build a gigantic tower to put their favorite game on top, or can they just place a single block for their favorite game and leave it at that?
Again I'm playing with the idea that more votes have more value - a considered 'tower' is worth more than ticking one 'YES' box - but you certainly have to consider the fact some people will only 'like' one game.
Someone who's really thinking about this stuff could even work with the 'links' people use between games - I'm not really thinking about that myself, but the implication is clearly there.
Reply With Quote 26-09-2012, 05:34 PM
Posts 8,039 Originally Posted by TillEulenspiegel
I tried the earlier version on an iPad2 and whilst it worked, it was pretty much unusable.
The problem is partly 800 images (even loaded-on-demand as they are now) although and single-core devices (phones then) seem to struggle to both render AND do the physics at the same time (Android phones have a problem with Box2D in general because of that).
Posts 19 If you have a jailbroken device, you can grab Nitrous from Cydia and enable the faster JVM for any app you think needs it. It costs $US1, so if you're happy with Safari then it's fine to miss.
Posts 8,039 I'm back with more silliness - again from the Greenlight thread but interesting in it's own right (I hope).
Greenlight has over 8000 screenshots/videos available for the games on there - I thought I'd wrap them all around a 3D tube and try to make your browser/
http://www.shrewdlogarithm.com/tube
Works best in Chrome (or another Webkit browser like Safari perhaps) - slow in Firefox - no support in Opera or IE yet.
Mouse to pan - mousewheel to move up/down - click videos to play them - click screenshots to open the Greenlight site for that game
Have fun - tell me if it borks :)
p.s. motion sickness types may need to hover over the close button ;)
Posts 511 Seems to work fine in Firefox, but I haven't found a way of reliably stacking them without the connections appearing. Games with connections between them are far more precariously stacked than just trying to put boxes on top of one another - it's fine with 3 games but very difficult with 4. Also, I'm not sure what the mousewheel is supposed to do - scale the tower? Does that mean picking a game from among a big pile? - but is there a way of reproducing it if I don't have a mousewheel?
Possibly related, but if I've stacked ten games and I spot one that I think should be at the bottom or near the middle of the pile, how do I put it there? Do I have to re-do everything?
Thanks - it's a neat gadget, and it doesn't have the problem Greenlight does / did of taking me to a separate screen every time I choose a game and then re-setting all my settings when I go back to the list. :)
Seems to work fine in Firefox, but I haven't found a way of reliably stacking them without the connections appearing. Games with connections between them are far more precariously stacked than just trying to put boxes on top of one another - it's fine with 3 games but very difficult with 4.
The 'boxes' as they appear (because they're that shape in Greenlight) are actually 'circles' in physics terms - as the whole idea came from World of Goo's towers and circles just work better than squares in terms of making 'wobbly' towers.
In World of Goo - the circles would all gravitate to the bottom UNLESS they're connected - but the lack-of-space and slightly more basic physics here limits which spoil that a bit.
The idea here is to make you think about how you stack stuff tho - it's very much a work-in-progress but I wanted people to have to think about how they arrange the games - not just say "all of these should be the lowest and this one here is the highest".
Also, I'm not sure what the mousewheel is supposed to do - scale the tower? Does that mean picking a game from among a big pile? - but is there a way of reproducing it if I don't have a mousewheel?
Mousewheel scales the play-area for the tower - so you can get more games in there OR so that the smaller amount of games you have fills the space (as the higher you go, the better your games score).
No way of doing it without a mousewheel atm - I should probably make it 'CONTROL+MOUSE' or something like that tho!?
I was thinking of putting 'change gravity' buttons in there - which would drag everything to the sides or the top and thus enable adding things to different places on the tower. 'Saving' your tower would reset gravity - so we'd keep the same order of priority for everyone - and that might, in itself, make a game out of this!? :)
Another thought was to enable 'swapping' of games with existing games in the tower but that's technically very, very tricky to do - it would solve your issue tho and so it's on my "to think about" list :)
Yeah, that alone is the sign that they didn't think this thing through much - here's 800 games, hack through them with minimal assistance from technology which is designed for exactly this sort of thing!
Reply With Quote 18-10-2012, 10:56 PM
Posts 8,039 Been a while since I updated this but I've been working on my 3D display-o-tron for all the Greenlight games - adding a load of stuff etc. - so I thought I'd drag more of your views from you!
http://www.shrewdlogarithm.com/tube/
Whilst adding a new 3D mode I encountered some entertaining bugs - I documented these as part of a blog series I'm doing on this - the videos are in this post
http://shrewdlogarithm.blogspot.co.u...t-2a-when.html
The rest of the series explains some of the 'how this works' stuff - for the curious - and the code if, of course, viewable too.
p.s. One of the videos I cheekily left the radio station I was listening-to in - so it probably won't last long but I think it suits the imagery so I'll chance-my-luck until they demand I take it down :)<eot>Barako Bull Rose From Defeat As They Beat Powerade To The Ground In PBA Season 37 Sunday Showdown In Smart-Araneta Coliseum | BallersPinas: Sports and Lifestyle Delivered Fresh
Barako Bull Rose From Defeat As They Beat Powerade To The Ground In PBA Season 37 Sunday Showdown In Smart-Araneta Coliseum
The Barako Bull Engergy gave their full energy as they beat the Powerade Tigers via 39 point lead, 117-78, in the 1st game of the PBA Season 37 today at the Smart-Araneta Coliseum.
The Barakos were blazing the court as they showered successful 3-pointers that widen their lead until the end of the game. Paul Artadi, the man of the match garnered 14 points, started the game with a booming 3-pointer that ignited an 11-0 run in the opening quarter. It made the Powerade Tigers struggle to chase the score.
In the second quarter, the Powerade Tigers were very consistent in making most of their points through their good shooting from the charity stripe, but the problem for them was that they were unsuccessful from most of their attempts in the field and that made it possible for the Barakos to stay on lead. The Tigers were consistently leaving a window of opportunity for the Barakos to increase their lead even further.