This looks great. I was hoping it would have been a good OrcaSlicer replacement for my FDM printer, but unfortunately it didn't generate any top surfaces (except for the topmost one) for a model I imported in. I didn't know if it was the printer profile (Creality.Ender3) or something else, but it seems I'm still using OrcaSlicer for the time being.
I used to use it in college to program at the library. I haven't used it in at least 5 years though. I believe it was also useful to learn a new language in an environment where I couldn't install software.
Actually, you don't need to implement the other chips to create your ALU. You just have to implement the chips in the chapter. Each chapter is designed to be self-sustaining, so if you wanted to jump ahead to make the ALU you could, then later implement the underlying components.
Are there any other sources with constant up to date imagery like this? This looks great and would like to see other current satellite images, and maybe use them for visualizations or some projects.
This actually gave me an idea for a way to get people to pay for your app. Use metric in countries that use imperial units and vice versa. It would be an awful thing to do.
Why would they use their own tools and risk revealing them to the public when they can use a recognized existing tool and mask their full capabilities?
If video processing is what you want to do, I can very much recommend Avisynth[1] (and while it's Windows software, it runs quite well in Wine). For a more natively cross-platform alternative, there's also Vapoursynth[2], but I personally prefer Avisynth's DSL much more over Vapoursynth's Python scripting, not to mention it's generally got more filters available for it.