Why not go to a lower temp?
That doesn't make him an engineer.
I don't think it's because it's a dynamic language like you seem to imply. How else would you implement both stack and heap in non-'dynamic' languages without constraining them to a fixed size?
That site's design is an anti-pattern. :|
> Did anybody try to use APL (or a derivate) in web development? I'd love to see how it handles web dev. It doesn't look like it'd be good at those types of things.
Maybe x/month plus y/call over a certain amount, for the people who use a disproportionately large amount of resources?
It seems like it'd be far easier to track usage and prevent/resolve disputes with a monthly charge, too.
> I've read enough biomedical literature to know there is a source claiming just about anything you can think of Then as I initially said, it really shouldn't be hard for you to imagine why someone would give the advice…
> I don't follow your point You appeared confused as to why someone would say what they'd said. I pointed out one of the glaringly obvious reasons why someone could have done that. And there's also the fact that the…
> Why would you tell someone that? Because there was a huge study that indicated aspirin should be used as a minor blood thinner and reduced heart attacks, and because most/a lot of doctors recommend it for such.
It's over 7 hours from Seattle, unless you mean on supersonic aircraft?
> Whatever you're trying to figure out with that question, there's gotta be a better way to probe that, that doesn't make it look like you're wasting the available time.
So he's insane?
> hiring in tech is BROKEN. Other industries do it better. Can you explain how other industries do it better and come up with a better, plausible, non-fantastical way to interview programmers? I'd love to know how to…
AFAIK, most or all US schools have required a 4 year degree for a long time now.
> surely not a hard question, you would think! Not so much hard, more that it sounds like a complete waste of time and could be signaling to people that this is one more non-technical/HR interview they have to get…
Different wavelengths?
Yes. Typing != information work.
Look at all the other gray comments here. Any comment questioning why this is so great appears to be severely triggering the masses.
Logitech makes those magic trains.
> you mustn't write them off... It could be you one day. It's a little discomforting how few people seem to care about that.
Isn't likely to be from dice because it's such an ancient expression, like from Roman times?
That's quite a claim.
The sandwich analogy doesn't really hold up.
Cool, I think it's Matt Stonie on the right in the competitive eating GIF.
Why not go to a lower temp?
That doesn't make him an engineer.
I don't think it's because it's a dynamic language like you seem to imply. How else would you implement both stack and heap in non-'dynamic' languages without constraining them to a fixed size?
That site's design is an anti-pattern. :|
> Did anybody try to use APL (or a derivate) in web development? I'd love to see how it handles web dev. It doesn't look like it'd be good at those types of things.
Maybe x/month plus y/call over a certain amount, for the people who use a disproportionately large amount of resources?
It seems like it'd be far easier to track usage and prevent/resolve disputes with a monthly charge, too.
> I've read enough biomedical literature to know there is a source claiming just about anything you can think of Then as I initially said, it really shouldn't be hard for you to imagine why someone would give the advice…
> I don't follow your point You appeared confused as to why someone would say what they'd said. I pointed out one of the glaringly obvious reasons why someone could have done that. And there's also the fact that the…
> Why would you tell someone that? Because there was a huge study that indicated aspirin should be used as a minor blood thinner and reduced heart attacks, and because most/a lot of doctors recommend it for such.
It's over 7 hours from Seattle, unless you mean on supersonic aircraft?
> Whatever you're trying to figure out with that question, there's gotta be a better way to probe that, that doesn't make it look like you're wasting the available time.
So he's insane?
> hiring in tech is BROKEN. Other industries do it better. Can you explain how other industries do it better and come up with a better, plausible, non-fantastical way to interview programmers? I'd love to know how to…
AFAIK, most or all US schools have required a 4 year degree for a long time now.
> surely not a hard question, you would think! Not so much hard, more that it sounds like a complete waste of time and could be signaling to people that this is one more non-technical/HR interview they have to get…
Different wavelengths?
Yes. Typing != information work.
Look at all the other gray comments here. Any comment questioning why this is so great appears to be severely triggering the masses.
Logitech makes those magic trains.
> you mustn't write them off... It could be you one day. It's a little discomforting how few people seem to care about that.
Isn't likely to be from dice because it's such an ancient expression, like from Roman times?
That's quite a claim.
The sandwich analogy doesn't really hold up.
Cool, I think it's Matt Stonie on the right in the competitive eating GIF.