Message from @ThisIsChris
Discord ID: 407363437857865749
@Deleted User How do you make your memes?
What is up with the new tor for android? Can't switch by swiping and added some basic apps like google chrome etc.
@Deleted User hmm I didn't know you could switch by swiping before , minus that, I can't notice any differences, although admittedly I only used it when DailyStormer was down. Are there any other onion sites you recommend as worthwhile?
@ThisIsChris. I use it to run Twitter through and Orfox.
Cool I didn't know you could do that. @Deleted User does that get around bans?
@ThisIsChris. No unfortunately, as far as posts being too "altright" etc... just runs Twitter traffic through tor for privacy. Orfox (the web browser) is dependent on the site suspecting unusual traffic as far as viewing. Finding a link for Twitter on how to do...
Install and activate Orbot, open Twitter, tap the gear icon on the home screen.Check the “proxy” box, enter ‘localhost’ and ‘8118’.Open your account settings, and disable the “Sync Data” option to stop push notifications which cannot be proxied through Orbot/Tor.
Ok I got a question for all the computer gurus here. My wifi works on my tv my kids iPad and my phone. Won't work on my laptop. But I can use my hot spot on my phone to get the internet to work on the laptop... wth.
@JesseJames Does your laptop "see" your wifi and you just can't connect to it? Or does your laptop not even see the wifi?
It sees it connects and everything just won't load anything. But if I connect it to my hot spot on my phone it works
@JesseJames Hmm... 2 Qs:
1. Have you tried restarting your computer?
2. What model router do you have?
Yes I have restarted it it's always my go to lol. It's an arris. Server admin told me to check my drivers on the laptop and I'm going to try that later and see what it does. It's just odd to me the wifi is working on other devices and the laptop is working on the hotspot.
@JesseJames on the router (maybe on the bottom) there should be an "http://" followed by several numbers, possibly `http://10.0.0.1` or `http://192.168.0.1` or something similar. Write that into your laptop's web browser and see if that page loads. If that page DOES load then your computer is connecting to your router fine.
@JesseJames Also what OS do you use?
I think it's windows 10 pro. I will check that as soon as I get home. Thanks man.
@JesseJames You're welcome. Yeah so I would check that "http://" thing on your router. If you can connect, then the connection between your router and your computer is fine and it is something else. But if you can't connect to that address then as siggy said it is probably a device driver thing. Use that wifi you can get from the cell phone to run the driver update wizard in your system settings.
@ThisIsChris I sure will thanks bro appreciate it!
@JesseJames yw, let us know how it goes!
So I got home tried the http thing and it worked and now it's working just fine.
@JesseJames Cool, thanks for the update! Networking can be a finnicky thing. If that happens in the future I would try visiting that address again to see if that knocks it into shape
Is it possible that fixed something? If so what could it be?
There's a few things it could have been, all of them "bugs". When you connect to the internet, traffic goes from your computer to your router to your modem to your ISP, and then out to the rest of the world. Anywhere along that chain there could be problems getting traffic in or out. By connecting to that numerial address on your router, you were connecting to a website that is just on your router, so the traffic didn't have to go all the way to your ISP. In other words, you were *just* testing the connection between your computer and your router. This was simpler for the router then having to get traffic from the ISP and forward it to your computer, so by doing a simpler task it may have just reminded your router how to connect correctly to your computer, and then it was able to do the more complex task of forwarding you traffic from the real internet correctly
Ah. Just when I think I'm fairly good with computers. Lol.
haha to be fair without the manufacturer's code it's hard to know *exactly* what's going on, you just have some broad ideas of how things work and try poking around in them.
Does a hammer work for poking around?
lol
@everyone
```c
char c[] = "Str";
c[1] = 'r';
printf("%s\n", c); //Output: Srr
```
How to get this to work with an array of strings? I have an array of strings (char*) and I need to modify individual characters of each string. I'm getting segfaulted because I had type `char**`. Now I know `char[]` works for individual strings but how can I extend that to arrays of them? I'm writing this in C btw.
@JesseJames what do you think?
@John O - obviously I know the answer but I think the outcome would be satisfying.
Ball peen or claw?
Hmm that's a tough one.
You not happy with StackOverflow answer, @sigruna14 ?
1st answer here is easier than me writing out pointer thingy data structure: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1088622/how-do-i-create-an-array-of-strings-in-c
@Why Tea I'm not sure how that addresses what I'm trying to do here.
Then maybe I don't understand the question. "How do I create an array of strings" is your question, and the second answer in that StackOverflow pretty much covers it.
For multiple cases.
No, I know how to create an array of strings. My question is how to modify individual characters of the strings within said array.
The answer to that is in there if you read carefully.
```c
char a[2][14];
strcpy(a[0], "blah");
strcpy(a[1], "hmm");```
You're talking about this? Wholesale string copy?