The chairs are probably more like $1000 after bulk discount for buying hundreds of them,and they'll last 20 years. Having worked in many corporate environments, including FAANGs that seemingly spare no expense, none of…
The fact that the 1:1s are monthly makes me question how much the author really knows about managing people.
The bigger issue I've seen is that there's a relatively fixed amount of time required for overhead activities (e.g. compliance training) and context sharing (meetings). Purely hypothetically, if those sorts of…
I don't think the second is realistic, as that might be considered an attack on NATO countries, which is likely not a scale of war Russia is looking for.
While I don't dispute the accuracy of your description, there are some conclusions that I wish we as a society would revisit. By your logic that the researchers only work for the university in a very technical sense…
I generally like to base my interview questions on the candidate's resume, asking questions of various levels of difficulty about the areas they claim to be skilled. I find it gives a better sense of their abilities…
When I was interviewing developers from a very large offshoring firm, they covertly had an account manager listening in to take down the questions for future candidates. Each interview, I'd ask a slightly different…
This conclusion feels like saying more CPU and memory are better. Seems obvious that more moves allows matching to have more nuance, but I guess cool that someone proved it.
You were so close to getting there - he is a rationalist and, purely my personal opinion, the markets have been behaving irrationally for several years (I would say even the Trump years of fiscal manipulation to pump…
SWE manager here, at multiple well known companies, and this isn't how it's worked at any of them. Some of them I've had to do leetcode interviews while at others, it was important to know aubergine who could vouch for…
Unfortunately, the name is already taken - by Cassandra, which is widely used enough that it's probably worth avoiding a naming clash.
As soon as you mentioned being ok with building bots, all desire to help you vanished.
You know the wings double as fuel tanks, right?
Or what's legally allowed by the ToS...
Author is looking for the wrong correlation - the price is only indirectly linked to the amount of silicon being diverted to crypto. Should be correlating to hash capacity.
Incorrect on background checks - there are employment verification services that get quite a lot of data (many companies opt in to sending them payroll data).
Work at a FAANG - received a specified number of unvested shares with my offer, and a fixed vesting schedule.
Had one done, received the packet and they had everything going back to my internships. I think many large employers voluntarily report the info to an employment verification service for mutual benefit.
The argument is "because it's possible to do misuse with inheritance, you should never use it". By extension then, because it's possible to misuse Java/any programming language/computers/electricity/etc., you should…
Without any supporting evidence, I have no idea how this qualifies as news.
No
It's funny because it's strikingly similar to .NET web forms' original (and utterly trash) implementation of AJAX. Everything that is old is new again...
You could probably do it and maintain clean separation of logic vs presentation but what's the benefit? I don't really think producers or consumers want a generic frontend - it's main utility seems like it would be for…
That would essentially be Postman or some other API testing tool. The thing is, very few people have any interest in browsing pure data. HATEOAS for JSON is especially useless given the same information can be derived…
Are you sure it's not regulatory? Banks don't typically cut off an industry unless they're either told to, or they're seeing extremely high fraud rates for a particular type of transaction (e.g. calling their credit…
The chairs are probably more like $1000 after bulk discount for buying hundreds of them,and they'll last 20 years. Having worked in many corporate environments, including FAANGs that seemingly spare no expense, none of…
The fact that the 1:1s are monthly makes me question how much the author really knows about managing people.
The bigger issue I've seen is that there's a relatively fixed amount of time required for overhead activities (e.g. compliance training) and context sharing (meetings). Purely hypothetically, if those sorts of…
I don't think the second is realistic, as that might be considered an attack on NATO countries, which is likely not a scale of war Russia is looking for.
While I don't dispute the accuracy of your description, there are some conclusions that I wish we as a society would revisit. By your logic that the researchers only work for the university in a very technical sense…
I generally like to base my interview questions on the candidate's resume, asking questions of various levels of difficulty about the areas they claim to be skilled. I find it gives a better sense of their abilities…
When I was interviewing developers from a very large offshoring firm, they covertly had an account manager listening in to take down the questions for future candidates. Each interview, I'd ask a slightly different…
This conclusion feels like saying more CPU and memory are better. Seems obvious that more moves allows matching to have more nuance, but I guess cool that someone proved it.
You were so close to getting there - he is a rationalist and, purely my personal opinion, the markets have been behaving irrationally for several years (I would say even the Trump years of fiscal manipulation to pump…
SWE manager here, at multiple well known companies, and this isn't how it's worked at any of them. Some of them I've had to do leetcode interviews while at others, it was important to know aubergine who could vouch for…
Unfortunately, the name is already taken - by Cassandra, which is widely used enough that it's probably worth avoiding a naming clash.
As soon as you mentioned being ok with building bots, all desire to help you vanished.
You know the wings double as fuel tanks, right?
Or what's legally allowed by the ToS...
Author is looking for the wrong correlation - the price is only indirectly linked to the amount of silicon being diverted to crypto. Should be correlating to hash capacity.
Incorrect on background checks - there are employment verification services that get quite a lot of data (many companies opt in to sending them payroll data).
Work at a FAANG - received a specified number of unvested shares with my offer, and a fixed vesting schedule.
Had one done, received the packet and they had everything going back to my internships. I think many large employers voluntarily report the info to an employment verification service for mutual benefit.
The argument is "because it's possible to do misuse with inheritance, you should never use it". By extension then, because it's possible to misuse Java/any programming language/computers/electricity/etc., you should…
Without any supporting evidence, I have no idea how this qualifies as news.
No
It's funny because it's strikingly similar to .NET web forms' original (and utterly trash) implementation of AJAX. Everything that is old is new again...
You could probably do it and maintain clean separation of logic vs presentation but what's the benefit? I don't really think producers or consumers want a generic frontend - it's main utility seems like it would be for…
That would essentially be Postman or some other API testing tool. The thing is, very few people have any interest in browsing pure data. HATEOAS for JSON is especially useless given the same information can be derived…
Are you sure it's not regulatory? Banks don't typically cut off an industry unless they're either told to, or they're seeing extremely high fraud rates for a particular type of transaction (e.g. calling their credit…