DinaCoder98
No user record in our sample, but DinaCoder98 has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but DinaCoder98 has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
I've always wondered what the semantics of "national security" are when the deployment of this phrase led directly to 9/11
> their several-decades-old faux-environmental schlock Sorry, what are you referring to?
> Nowadays if you refer to "alternative meat", that means plant based meat substitutes 99% of the time. in what context? I'm betting this would necessitate not mentioning cell-cultured or lab-grown meat at all.
Ok, this would still obviate the use of gRPC on lambda
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> but they can choose what part of the industry they support. Sometimes they can, sometimes they can't, sometimes it's up to what they care and focus about. > If many care, they can make an impact. Sure, theoretically.…
gRPC is for long-lived services (and connections). Combining it with lambda doesn't make much sense.
The idea the individual consumer is responsible for policing industry is farcical on the face of it.
Is there any evidence that x86 can compete with arm on per-watt computation?
The reason we have bloat is it's easier to satisfy stakeholders if you don't give a damn. There's really no reason to discuss this at all once you realize this. But of course, ranting and reading rants is satisfying in…
I'd agree if our society had figured out any sane way to respond to crime in the first place, but that seems even worse than our barely extant resources for drug addiction in the first place. Somehow we're more willing…
I was pessimistic about grapheme-based orientation towards text, deleted it to research more, and I've come to the conclusion that this is simply not a consensus opinion. Can you give me an example where grapheme-based…
> Async work is generally slow and terrible, at least for the pace that you need to achieve to succeed. Really depends on the work that needs to get done. Sometimes it's just a matter of time and work that needs to be…
Ah, I thought you were referring to the benefits of such a system as compared to zig and blithely passing the responsibility of input validation on to the programmer. Rust of course demonstrates the benefit of checking…
Well sure, people may colloquially refer to a lot of things as "strings"—hell, you could refer to all sequences as strings if you just wanted to argue with people—but the idea of trying to encapsulate this all in the…
> And then everybody proceeds to write their own String library anyway. Is this true? It was (is!) certainly true for C, but C has an especially emaciated expectation for string processing primitives. Any runtime…
> If you're constructing invalid `str` you already have severely fucked up. Presumably it'd be better to know this immediately on initialization of the variable rather than at some point in the program that actually…
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Seems sort of like the opposite—a lot of the regulation is done by people installed by lobbying, sort of like a privately owned and operated part of government. Of course it's terrible for everyone but shareholders…
I guess I read your comment as contradicting itself by the phrase "the power" rather than "the illusion of power", especially since the american public is so easily distracted by petty squabbling, whereas capital is…
Oh, huh. I now recognize what you're referring to but I never would have realized that without being explicitly told so. Thank you.
> What if I spend more hours watching cat videos on Youtube over actually learning or making something? That doesn't sound that bad in itself. In my experience falling into this trap many, many times over my life, it's…
> FWIW, a friend of mine (and not "a friend of mine") What? Do you mean a coworker or something as compared to a friend?
Javascript may not have an official bytecode, but is it not also based on the same concept of using dictionaries to dispatch code and slow as a result? I certainly had always filed it away as "about as fast as python"…
I don't know what you mean by "fact", but your vote certainly holds less proportional power to influence a politician than that of 1/(population of the us). Politicians straight-up don't care about your opinion unless…