@sIDsleeper
What I meant by spam disliking is when one dislikes a whole bunch of pictures. Not, well, a person using a bot or alt s to dislike one picture multiple times.
@Bloomers @toonbat
I didn’t dislike the image but I have heard that some people just dislike spam certain images, mostly for trolling. I don’t really understand it myself but that could explain some of the possible dislikes for this.
@Bloomers
Yeah, I know the feeling. Mostly I’m intrigued as to why. If anyone who put in a dislike wants to message me explaining why, I promise to behave and hear you out. I’m merely curious.
Oh, I thought you meant a reference to something. I looked up what a parity bit was when you mentioned it earlier and I thought you were insulting me XD
@Dirty Bit
Parity bits are used to detect corrupted data that is being transfered/stored. it mostly only works on a single bit level. and all the Parity bit shows is if the data has an even or odd amount of 1s. 1 = odd, 0 = even
Imagine it as an easy/cheap way to check if data is correct or not.
for example the value 00110011 would have a parity bit 0, since there are an even amount of 1s. so the full data would be 001100110 (8 data + 1 parity), a value of 00100011 would be odd so you add a 1 to the end. 001000111.
notice how with the parity bit both values have an even amount of 1s. so if you send that data plus parity all the other device has to do is check if the transmitted data has an even amount of 1s, if it doesn’t than 1 bit is off, also known as a “Dirty Bit” or “Corrupted Bit”. then it requests the data again to hopefully get it right the second time.
if you’re really interested Ben Eater (great guy) made a video ing Partiy bits to send data reliably: VIDEO
This is why I fell in love with the fandom even before I fell in love with the show. I can glut myself on silly weirdness morning, noon, and night, and yet still manage to stumble into genuine breathtaking masterpieces on a regular basis.
Puppy. The bed was small, so I had no choice but to let her lay down on the floor. After I dozed off, I woke up in the middle of the night to feel something fuzzy next to me. The little girl pupper not only managed to get on the bed while I was sleeping, but look so cute doing it. I was content.
Nah, that’s not what I meant. Though that is another form of spamming.
I thought you meant it in a “raid-like” way, like on Steam for games when ppl get mad at devs for something.
What I meant by spam disliking is when one dislikes a whole bunch of pictures. Not, well, a person using a bot or alt s to dislike one picture multiple times.
8 is far from spam disliking, that number is frankly so low, it doesn’t even worth talking about.
Insert “Rookie numbers” meme here
@toonbat
I didn’t dislike the image but I have heard that some people just dislike spam certain images, mostly for trolling. I don’t really understand it myself but that could explain some of the possible dislikes for this.
Ahh, ok.
Yeah, I know the feeling. Mostly I’m intrigued as to why. If anyone who put in a dislike wants to message me explaining why, I promise to behave and hear you out. I’m merely curious.
Well, I don’t know what’s ‘disgusting’ about Rule 63 but, ookay. :/
Thanks for the informative video. You learn something new everyday, even on a pony site.
same here. I always give out an “awwwwwwwwwwwww” when I see it :D
Oh, I thought you meant a reference to something. I looked up what a parity bit was when you mentioned it earlier and I thought you were insulting me XD
Edited
Parity bits are used to detect corrupted data that is being transfered/stored. it mostly only works on a single bit level. and all the Parity bit shows is if the data has an even or odd amount of 1s. 1 = odd, 0 = even
Imagine it as an easy/cheap way to check if data is correct or not.
for example the value 00110011 would have a parity bit 0, since there are an even amount of 1s. so the full data would be 001100110 (8 data + 1 parity), a value of 00100011 would be odd so you add a 1 to the end. 001000111.
notice how with the parity bit both values have an even amount of 1s. so if you send that data plus parity all the other device has to do is check if the transmitted data has an even amount of 1s, if it doesn’t than 1 bit is off, also known as a “Dirty Bit” or “Corrupted Bit”. then it requests the data again to hopefully get it right the second time.
if you’re really interested Ben Eater (great guy) made a video ing Partiy bits to send data reliably: VIDEO
I don’t. And I feel like an idiot because of it.
Enlighten me?
now i don’t know if you’re following through with the refrence i made or you just had no idea what i meant
Sorry if my comment wasn’t properly structured.
you know, you’re the reason Parity bits exist
Aww :)
Puppy. The bed was small, so I had no choice but to let her lay down on the floor. After I dozed off, I woke up in the middle of the night to feel something fuzzy next to me. The little girl pupper not only managed to get on the bed while I was sleeping, but look so cute doing it. I was content.
Edited