iamaspacecow55
iamaspacecow55
iamaspacecow55

I can't do that. If I try to binge anime, I tend to start getting bored of them. Weekly episodes work better for me because its like a weekly snack (Though biweekly also works well for me)

But I don't think anyone is taking it to the extreme here, or even suggesting the the consequences would be anything but legal repercussions. Firing someone for what they said is legal. Murdering someone is not.

If he is a public facing figure and his actions harm the kotaku brand in some way, then yes, he probably will be chastised. It's not a moral question, it's a business one.

That's exactly the point though. He was not arrested (murder is illegal in all circumstances, so kind of a moot point). Your right to freedom of speech is not a right to be protected from social and contractual repercussions of said speech. Jason is exactly right here. Freedom of speech merely protects you against

Freeedom of speech is a legal right, whereas employment is not. As long as no criminal or civil suits were brought against him, his legal rights were not infringed upon. Whereas his employment was dependent on contract with his company, which usually includes a section that allows for the termination of said contract.

Don't forget how fun Pi gets when you get into complex space, like e^(i*pi) = -1, which is euler's identity (and is super amazing and leads to all sorts of weird analysis crap). You practically can't write a crazy complex equation without getting pi somewhere. Also useful when doing math in radians, which are clearly

You're right. Oops.

Technically, that's just the definition of an NP problem. NP-hard has an added condition that every problem be polynomial-time (P-time) reducible to NP. This is a more interesting set of problems because we only need to find a P-time algorithm for one of them to find a P-time algorithm for all of them. It's also a lot

Worth mentioning that World Conquest: ZVEZDA PLOT and Nisekoi are both playing on Crunchyroll