Q: what is this (**)?
A: Yes, it's exactly that. A pointer to a
pointer.
Q: what use does it have?
A: It has a number of uses. Particularly in representing 2 dimensional data (images, etc). In the case of your example char** argv can be thought of as an array of an array of chars. In this case each char* points to the beginning of a string. You could actually declare this data yourself explicitly like so.
char* myStrings[] = {
"Hello",
"World"
};
char** argv = myStrings;
// argv[0] -> "Hello"
// argv[1] -> "World"
When you access a pointer like an array the number that you index it with and the size of the element itself are used to offset to the address of the next element in the array. You could also access all of your numbers like so, and in fact this is basically what C is doing. Keep in mind, the compiler knows how many bytes a type like int uses at compile time. So it knows how big each step should be to the next element.
*(numbers + 0) = 1, address 0x0061FF1C
*(numbers + 1) = 3, address 0x0061FF20
*(numbers + 2) = 4, address 0x0061FF24
*(numbers + 3) = 5, address 0x0061FF28
The * operator is called the dereference operator. It is used to retrieve the value from memory that is pointed to by a pointer. numbers is literally just a pointer to the first element in your array.
In the case of my example myStrings could look something like this assuming that a pointer/address is 4 bytes, meaning we are on a 32 bit machine.
myStrings = 0x0061FF14
// these are just 4 byte addresses
(myStrings + 0) -> 0x0061FF14 // 0 bytes from beginning of myStrings
(myStrings + 1) -> 0x0061FF18 // 4 bytes from beginning of myStrings
myStrings[0] -> 0x0061FF1C // de-references myStrings @ 0 returning the address that points to the beginning of 'Hello'
myStrings[1] -> 0x0061FF21 // de-references myStrings @ 1 returning the address that points to the beginning of 'World'
// The address of each letter is 1 char, or 1 byte apart
myStrings[0] + 0 -> 0x0061FF1C which means... *(myStrings[0] + 0) = 'H'
myStrings[0] + 1 -> 0x0061FF1D which means... *(myStrings[0] + 1) = 'e'
myStrings[0] + 2 -> 0x0061FF1E which means... *(myStrings[0] + 2) = 'l'
myStrings[0] + 3 -> 0x0061FF1F which means... *(myStrings[0] + 3) = 'l'
myStrings[0] + 4 -> 0x0061FF20 which means... *(myStrings[0] + 4) = 'o'