The oldest video game in my collection is a 2 player Computer Space cabinet (glittery green color). One of the neat gameplay elements is that shots are implemented just as a distance in front of your ship that increases over time until it hits something or reaches a maximum distance. The play field also wraps at the screen edges so you can do things like fire off screen and then rotate your ship to curve your shot into the other player. It's unusual enough that most don't expect it.
@fribbledom The computer I'm using now, 0. The computer at the coffee roaster: 6
* touchscreen input
* USB serial adapter connected to a scale
* DATAQ DI-148 for logging data at the small roaster
* NI USB 9211 for logging data at the big roaster
* thermal receipt printer (prints batch tags that get clipped to the coffee buckets)
* barcode scanner
@Satsuma I hope not. Those can get incredibly violent and I'm not sure I can take it.
@mhoye Other reasons include stuff getting taught in the wrong order and weird priorities in terms of how much time is spent on various topics.
Here's two days on matrix operations. It makes a lot of what we'll cover later a lot easier, but I won't tell you how and we'll never speak of this again.
I was hoping to have the next episode of Coffee and Code out by now, but I thought it might be nice to have some graphics for one of the sections and I haven't had time to finish writing the code to generate what I want. If it takes too much longer I'll just do without and maybe extract the audio from that section and turn it into a different video once I have more time.
@em The most frustrating thing about this Pluto stuff is that apparently nobody knows what an adjective is anymore. Pluto is an orange dog. Orange doesn't negate dog-ness.
My apprentice liked things closer to cup 24, but this needs to be an expensive coffee and out that dark it's not sufficiently different from another coffee in the product line that costs quite a bit less. It's important to keep the whole product line in mind to avoid having lots of tasty coffees where the primary difference is just the label on the bag.
I liked the 18th cup (ordered from lightest to darkest) best, but I'll want to adjust the timing to see if I can boost the intensity.
Author of Typica software for coffee roasters.