I can see the 3D, but struggle to put together what they are sometimes because I don’t have colors to put the image together.
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Alright, we just need to let them think they’re right and we had it all wrong. ‘Oh! What a brilliant idea—man, I’m so glad you thought of that. It makes so much more sense! Let’s go this route instead, full steam ahead!’
kaotic@lemmy.worldto Dad Jokes@lemmy.world•Two cargo ships collided in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. One was carrying red paint and one was carrying blue paint.English17·3 months agoTo be fair how colors mix with light vs paints are completely different. With light, maroon is made by combining mostly red with a small amount of blue and reducing brightness—since additive mixing can’t produce true dark tones, it relies on dimming. With paint, maroon is created by mixing red with a bit of blue or black, which absorbs more light, naturally producing the dark, muted red. So in light, maroon is a dim, cool red; in paint, it’s a red with absorbed brightness and added depth.
kaotic@lemmy.worldto Sysadmin@lemmy.world•What to do when a MySQL/MariaDB database gets too large for a single host?7·3 months agoI work for a company that handles this In a few ways. We set up read replicas to handle large read queries. To offload the reads from the primary server. Data is replicated to the read replicas so reporting can be run from that server. And not add load to the primary server.
The second approach is sharding. Sharding breaks a large table into smaller, more manageable chunks, distributing them across systems. This reduces the burden on any one server, improves performance, and enables scaling out as data or traffic increases.
This was the final straw for me, I’m done with Nintendo.