Before django implements new features it should rework some of the crappy old stuff: Auth is terrible, models and forms need to be more flexible. Also a lot of little things like forms myform.as_div are missing.
The important figure is net taxes payed. You add all the taxes you pay and subtract all the direct benefits you gain. If someone pays a lot of taxes but gets free high school education for their 4 children and medicare…
Whenever a recession hits a country everbody doubts their system. They look for other countries which are growing at the moment and try to emulate their success. I still remember the time when the japanese were strong…
I think the Java culture plays a big part in the whole mess. It would be easily possible in other languages to write 4 implementations of a basic list or public setter/getter for every member or buffered stream…
a) He compares a 300k education over 4 yeards with an average master degree income. I have no idea about prices in the US but i would be very surprised if the decent, but not stellar schools have a 50k/year tuition…
Before django implements new features it should rework some of the crappy old stuff: Auth is terrible, models and forms need to be more flexible. Also a lot of little things like forms myform.as_div are missing.
The important figure is net taxes payed. You add all the taxes you pay and subtract all the direct benefits you gain. If someone pays a lot of taxes but gets free high school education for their 4 children and medicare…
Whenever a recession hits a country everbody doubts their system. They look for other countries which are growing at the moment and try to emulate their success. I still remember the time when the japanese were strong…
I think the Java culture plays a big part in the whole mess. It would be easily possible in other languages to write 4 implementations of a basic list or public setter/getter for every member or buffered stream…
a) He compares a 300k education over 4 yeards with an average master degree income. I have no idea about prices in the US but i would be very surprised if the decent, but not stellar schools have a 50k/year tuition…