Re precomputing fifth powers, seems Fortran not only has array comprehensions, but compile-time array comprehensions. It was never exactly my cup of tea, but nearly 40 years out of university it seems Fortran has kinda kept up!
Yes or no conclusions aside (and despite its title, the article deserves better than that), the key point is I think this one: “But unlike telecoms, that overcapacity would likely get absorbed.”
You might think of it as a nation-scale business intelligence system. It’s part of the case study at the end of Stafford Beer’s Brain of the Firm, an (over?)ambitious project cut short by the fall of Allende in the Chilean coup.
Payload? You don’t need actual explosives to cause disruption, and for a state-sponsored actor to use them would be an act of war. The perfect being the enemy of the good here, provisioning for less hostile cases seems eminently sensible.
I wonder if they have considered Time Machine as a kind of private Dropbox, such that some directories are shares between machines, perhaps even remotely. I haven’t owned a Time Machine for at least a decade, but I might be tempted back by something like that.
Could add clicker support (which I have done previously). Note however that clickers vary between Up/Down and PgUp/PgDown. Enabling the former was potentially annoying if you like to use the arrow keys to scroll, so I made that configurable.
Alternatively you configure mappings per device outside the browser.
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