Editing Talk:1755: Old Days

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Interesting: there exist two versions of this comic with different size https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/old_days.png and https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/old_days_2x.png The latter is used when zooming in on the comic's page --[[Special:Contributions/172.68.51.70|172.68.51.70]] 19:48, 4 November 2016 (UTC)
 
Interesting: there exist two versions of this comic with different size https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/old_days.png and https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/old_days_2x.png The latter is used when zooming in on the comic's page --[[Special:Contributions/172.68.51.70|172.68.51.70]] 19:48, 4 November 2016 (UTC)
 
: This is to allow browsers to show a higher resolution image on screens that support it.  For example, on my Mac Retina display, which has 2 screen pixels per CSS pixel in each dimension, the comic I see on xkcd's page looks much crisper than the version here.  This is because xkcd is using the <tt>srcset</tt> tag to select the 2x version of the image on high-resolution screens scaled down 50%; or rather, not scaled up by 2x like most other images.
 
 
: I think this is the first time xkcd has used this feature.  I don't recall seeing it before, and comic 1754 doesn't use it.  -- [[Special:Contributions/108.162.246.42|108.162.246.42]] 15:29, 6 November 2016 (UTC)
 
  
 
You didn't have to ship the punch cards to a company, but you did have to put them into a queue to be processed, and if you did have a typo or other simple mistake, you'd have to wait to get the output before knowing (which could take days). Most of what she says actually makes sense, it's just not fully accurate. You use to have to manually collect your garbage (making sure you unallocated your memory). You often did have to mix code and assembly (thought not for comments, and would that be // or /* */ or # or...). She also follows computer storage history. So again, not accurate, but it makes sense. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.237.88|108.162.237.88]] 19:56, 4 November 2016 (UTC)
 
You didn't have to ship the punch cards to a company, but you did have to put them into a queue to be processed, and if you did have a typo or other simple mistake, you'd have to wait to get the output before knowing (which could take days). Most of what she says actually makes sense, it's just not fully accurate. You use to have to manually collect your garbage (making sure you unallocated your memory). You often did have to mix code and assembly (thought not for comments, and would that be // or /* */ or # or...). She also follows computer storage history. So again, not accurate, but it makes sense. [[Special:Contributions/108.162.237.88|108.162.237.88]] 19:56, 4 November 2016 (UTC)

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