Really? I find that for some people the only criteria they need for a stance, whichever side they're on, is just to know how to stand so they're opposite the other side.
Between the country that will throw you in jail for posting funny memes comparing the president to a cartoon bear, and the one where the newspapers are literally running headlines asking if the president has significant memory issues [1], I wonder which has more press freedom.
CrossCode runs on HTML5 canvas and nw.js. Not only is the pixel art really good, the game runs incredibly well even on low speced PCs given its unique stack, even though it is fairly demanding since both combat and puzzles requires fairly strict timing.
While I don't think the legislation make sense, I don't think it's not a problem. Here's some statistics:
> Last year, police departments seized at least 25,785 ghost guns nationwide, the Justice Department said recently, and those are just the weapons submitted by police to ATF for tracing, even though they don’t have serial numbers and largely cannot be traced.
> In 2021, the number of guns recovered was 19,344, meaning seizures rose 33 percent the following year. ATF has linked ghost guns to 692 homicides and nonfatal shootings through 2021, including mass killings and school shootings.
> The report found that annual law enforcement seizures of guns without serial numbers [in California] have risen 16-fold over the last decade, going from fewer than 1,300 in the early 2010s to more than 20,000 in both 2021 and 2022. The rise in ghost guns has happened alongside a pandemic-era surge in gun violence in California and the nation as a whole.
Ghostguns meant mostly-home-made a few years ago.Typified by 3d printed guns.
Recently (last 3 years) there has been an attempt at redefinition to include 80% guns (80% of work completed before purchase, end user does >60 min of work to complete it) and normal guns with their SN removed.
So now when someone quotes ghostgun numbers, they're mostly talking about normal guns with SN's removed.
I don't think anyone would really draw a distinction between these two cases as it applies to 3d printers. If the argument is that a tool is now on the market that made what used to be a high-effort activity into a low-effort one where you can now with some YT videos make less traceable guns then honestly, it kinda sucks in a ruining it for the class kinda way, but it actually seems somewhat reasonable to regulate them like firearms. If only so that the police know what doors to knock on if such a gun turns up.
At least where I live, the vast majority "ghost guns" that are getting used for crimes are polymer80 glocks that can be built with just a drill, no 3d printing required.
The majority of ghost gun crime arrests and charges that I’ve seen in various local and nationwide news articles are still polymer80 frames and 80% ar-type lowers, vs. printed frames. I’d estimate only about 10% or less involved printing but is creeping up with p80 taking heat and printing becoming more ubiquitous.
I don't think isEmpty is O(n) except in the case where the object is a prototype[1] - I assume that's one of those weird JS edge cases - otherwise it does what you expect, which is to iterate with a for-in loop and return on the first iteration, so it is O(1).
Not sure if the OP is here but on Firefox clicking the "API reference" button on the top left causes the full page transition to stutter. The profiler says more than 150ms is spent in a getBoundingClientRect call in a componentDidMount triggering reflow + style computation and 30ms on set Element.innerHTML. That seems excessive especially since I'm looking at this on a recent M1 Macbook.