Yes, I believe that's what happened here. Very poor decision by the mods; the Google/Apple ones make sense to merge, but the AWS one is a very different issue, and could have a far more interesting technical discussion…
I really haven't seen any card that has better net reward generation than Discover, if you want a "one card for maximum rewards". You can definitely earn more if you juggle cards, but the base discover card is really…
Yeah its weird that Texas is "different" in this regard? The process is the same even in other states; I've never seen a Tesla store with a stock of cars just there on-site ready to buy that day, you always order online…
"In my opinion"
Have you seen Parks & Rec, and remember that scene in a Home Depot where an associate walks up to Ron, asks him if he needs help with a project, and Ron responds "I know more than you"? I've pulled a variation of that…
You can run any container. It just wouldn't run as you expect if you don't implement the lambda runtime api. > Google Cloud Run, which everyone keeps comparing this with, works exactly like that. Everyone does keep…
Just now? When you search for Firefox or Chrome on Bing (the default search engine on Edge), the first result in large font and contrasting background is "Microsoft Recommends You Keep Using This Browser" (referring to…
> As a follow up, several people point out that it could happen to me or a family member, but this seems even further reason to have DKIM so that if someone attempts to blackmail me based on the contents of my email,…
My guess is that they'd still keep the efficiency cores around, but provide more performance cores. So likely a 12 or 16 core processor, with 4 or 6 of those dedicated to efficiency cores. The M1 supposedly has a 10w…
We have a `user` GraphQL type. It has 200+ fields and resolvers into other data. Fortunately, clients don't need to pull everything. Well, within one of our frontend apps, someone wrote a "GetUser" query fragment,…
Right, and that's my biggest fear. The process side of this industry is in a really scary spot right now. TSMC is killing it. Nvidia is using Samsung to fab the RTX 3xxx chips, and there's some rumblings that low yields…
You may be underestimating the size and scope of some of the big WhatsApp channels. Beyond a certain point they really look like a traditional social network, and not an isolated group of people sharing something in…
Github Actions really is a freakin awesome product. Yeah, there's lock-in, but their free plan (and cheap Pro plan for individuals) offers a great value. And, really, CI is CI; if you ever need to migrate, even for this…
There are (at least) 66 distinct contributors, according to the commit history.
Notion is excellent, and probably not going anywhere.
I legitimately don't understand how Facebook has any grounds to C&D this application. Its a Terms and Conditions violation. Ok, I get that. But, at what point did the developers of this application ever agree to any…
> I have a friend who's a millenial who barely knows how to use his desktop PC (It's a Mac) but is fluent on his iPad/iPhone. This worries me not because of any open computing concerns, but because of how FUNDAMENTAL…
'malloc' gives you a pointer to a fixed length block of memory that you can use to store data. 'ls' lists files in a directory. That's totally different, functionality wise. 'malloc' gives you a pointer to a fixed…
Fun fact: [1] > Jeff Bezos’ original spec for S3 was very succinct – he wanted malloc (a key memory allocation function for C programs) for the Internet. [1]…
Its going to be painful. They're going to split up the companies along the wrong lines. The products these companies produce are going to suffer tremendously. It still needs to be done.
XLSX's limit is 2^20, or just over 1.04 million (as the article says).
I have not noticed this in GUI applications, which generally have some overhead anyway so the snap overhead is negligible. I have noticed it on simple CLI applications, such as jq, where the snap is often 10x+ worse…
It can dynamically link within the container, but as far as I know the container as a whole does not dynamically link with the outside world. Its effectively a chroot with a full system image inside that root…
Well, as others have said: Hitting exactly 80% is pretty much impossible. And we've established that hitting more than 80% produces languages that are often bad, in some way or another. So, logically it follows: aim for…
Its my understanding that, back in the day, Quake was "the" poster child game for OpenGL's capabilities over D3D. Similar to today, how Doom Eternal is "the" poster child for Vulkan. And now Microsoft owns id software.
Yes, I believe that's what happened here. Very poor decision by the mods; the Google/Apple ones make sense to merge, but the AWS one is a very different issue, and could have a far more interesting technical discussion…
I really haven't seen any card that has better net reward generation than Discover, if you want a "one card for maximum rewards". You can definitely earn more if you juggle cards, but the base discover card is really…
Yeah its weird that Texas is "different" in this regard? The process is the same even in other states; I've never seen a Tesla store with a stock of cars just there on-site ready to buy that day, you always order online…
"In my opinion"
Have you seen Parks & Rec, and remember that scene in a Home Depot where an associate walks up to Ron, asks him if he needs help with a project, and Ron responds "I know more than you"? I've pulled a variation of that…
You can run any container. It just wouldn't run as you expect if you don't implement the lambda runtime api. > Google Cloud Run, which everyone keeps comparing this with, works exactly like that. Everyone does keep…
Just now? When you search for Firefox or Chrome on Bing (the default search engine on Edge), the first result in large font and contrasting background is "Microsoft Recommends You Keep Using This Browser" (referring to…
> As a follow up, several people point out that it could happen to me or a family member, but this seems even further reason to have DKIM so that if someone attempts to blackmail me based on the contents of my email,…
My guess is that they'd still keep the efficiency cores around, but provide more performance cores. So likely a 12 or 16 core processor, with 4 or 6 of those dedicated to efficiency cores. The M1 supposedly has a 10w…
We have a `user` GraphQL type. It has 200+ fields and resolvers into other data. Fortunately, clients don't need to pull everything. Well, within one of our frontend apps, someone wrote a "GetUser" query fragment,…
Right, and that's my biggest fear. The process side of this industry is in a really scary spot right now. TSMC is killing it. Nvidia is using Samsung to fab the RTX 3xxx chips, and there's some rumblings that low yields…
You may be underestimating the size and scope of some of the big WhatsApp channels. Beyond a certain point they really look like a traditional social network, and not an isolated group of people sharing something in…
Github Actions really is a freakin awesome product. Yeah, there's lock-in, but their free plan (and cheap Pro plan for individuals) offers a great value. And, really, CI is CI; if you ever need to migrate, even for this…
There are (at least) 66 distinct contributors, according to the commit history.
Notion is excellent, and probably not going anywhere.
I legitimately don't understand how Facebook has any grounds to C&D this application. Its a Terms and Conditions violation. Ok, I get that. But, at what point did the developers of this application ever agree to any…
> I have a friend who's a millenial who barely knows how to use his desktop PC (It's a Mac) but is fluent on his iPad/iPhone. This worries me not because of any open computing concerns, but because of how FUNDAMENTAL…
'malloc' gives you a pointer to a fixed length block of memory that you can use to store data. 'ls' lists files in a directory. That's totally different, functionality wise. 'malloc' gives you a pointer to a fixed…
Fun fact: [1] > Jeff Bezos’ original spec for S3 was very succinct – he wanted malloc (a key memory allocation function for C programs) for the Internet. [1]…
Its going to be painful. They're going to split up the companies along the wrong lines. The products these companies produce are going to suffer tremendously. It still needs to be done.
XLSX's limit is 2^20, or just over 1.04 million (as the article says).
I have not noticed this in GUI applications, which generally have some overhead anyway so the snap overhead is negligible. I have noticed it on simple CLI applications, such as jq, where the snap is often 10x+ worse…
It can dynamically link within the container, but as far as I know the container as a whole does not dynamically link with the outside world. Its effectively a chroot with a full system image inside that root…
Well, as others have said: Hitting exactly 80% is pretty much impossible. And we've established that hitting more than 80% produces languages that are often bad, in some way or another. So, logically it follows: aim for…
Its my understanding that, back in the day, Quake was "the" poster child game for OpenGL's capabilities over D3D. Similar to today, how Doom Eternal is "the" poster child for Vulkan. And now Microsoft owns id software.