Back then developers didn't have tools to create websites that look good on both desktop and mobile devices. So websites back then were hardly usable. Apps solved this issue.
> The relevant question is who is going to pay you to write code manually. Hopefully companies in the industries where software quality matters and is regulated, e.g.: medicine, aviation, nuclear, etc. Although this…
AUR has always been a risk and that wasn't the first attack of that kind. And here... Well, if it was coordinated, they would've picked a distro that doesn't prompt responses like: "Oh, mandriva still exists?" Nah.…
These are two very different devices that serve two very different purposes. The comparison is flawed.
The issue is that most of these tools try to reinvent the wheel. Instead of using sql, you use 'fluent builders' or whatever, and they have their own tricks and cevats. Sqlc is the best thing I've personally used…
A text generator can't be responsible for decisions that people make. You're giving them too much agency. Idk how they did it, but so many people seem to hate AI instead of people who are pushing it.
The argument that the code typescript developers write isn't exactly what browsers eventually execute isn't convincing. Don't we have compilers and other tools in pretty much all mainstream languages? The tooling isn't…
> I was sitting alone in a café with a dog That isn't alone though. People are anxious to sit alone in a cafe because they think it's weird being all alone. But when you're with a dog - it's a different story.
> Mark Zuckerberg has blocked recruitment of artificial intelligence staff at Meta, slamming the brakes on a multibillion-dollar hiring spree amid fears of an AI bubble. > amid fears of an AI bubble Who told the…
Whoever designed this should be fired: https://ibb.co/yGHf2yB
Fun.
> The interesting thing for me about this particular tale is the commercial genesis of Airbus and the incentives of the management team have led it to catch up despite Boeing have a 20-year head start. But Boeing…
"Friend" has multiple definitions, including: > someone who is not an enemy and who you can trust Here's another: > a person who you know well and who you like a lot Don't you think it's beneficial to trust and like…
> The reason SPAs became the default wasn’t because they were better. It was because, for a while, they were the only way to deliver something that felt fluid. So they were better.
So that nonsense didn't even help? Great.
> As it has become more and more untenable for anti-EV propagandists to deny the air quality benefits of EVs, a common refrain from them has become “but tailpipe emissions aren’t everything, what about brakes and tires,…
The cookie banner reappears indefinitely on this website when I click 'only necessary' lol.
But why? These apps are ineffective. If you want to learn a language, don't waste your time on Duolingo or this...
Yeah, I was thinking the same. How we "talk" to llms is more about us than about them. For me it's natural to say "please" without thinking twice. I didn't even think about that until recently.
> Why does it have to be always only English? Because a lot of people already know English. You can find good candidates anywhere, bring them together, and they will be able to work together. That's the advantage of…
/me cires in Estonian
Although I have a smartphone, I understand the problem. It amazes me how many businesses create so many unnecessary obstacles between the user and the purchase these days. It doesn't make sense to me.
That's a fun project. But I wonder: is it a good idea to connect to the internet from these old systems?
I agree. All they had to do was to copy mIRC!
What is better than the Swiss cheese model or its derivatives? Planes still crash from time to time, but nobody is saying that the model is wrong as the reliability is insane.
Back then developers didn't have tools to create websites that look good on both desktop and mobile devices. So websites back then were hardly usable. Apps solved this issue.
> The relevant question is who is going to pay you to write code manually. Hopefully companies in the industries where software quality matters and is regulated, e.g.: medicine, aviation, nuclear, etc. Although this…
AUR has always been a risk and that wasn't the first attack of that kind. And here... Well, if it was coordinated, they would've picked a distro that doesn't prompt responses like: "Oh, mandriva still exists?" Nah.…
These are two very different devices that serve two very different purposes. The comparison is flawed.
The issue is that most of these tools try to reinvent the wheel. Instead of using sql, you use 'fluent builders' or whatever, and they have their own tricks and cevats. Sqlc is the best thing I've personally used…
A text generator can't be responsible for decisions that people make. You're giving them too much agency. Idk how they did it, but so many people seem to hate AI instead of people who are pushing it.
The argument that the code typescript developers write isn't exactly what browsers eventually execute isn't convincing. Don't we have compilers and other tools in pretty much all mainstream languages? The tooling isn't…
> I was sitting alone in a café with a dog That isn't alone though. People are anxious to sit alone in a cafe because they think it's weird being all alone. But when you're with a dog - it's a different story.
> Mark Zuckerberg has blocked recruitment of artificial intelligence staff at Meta, slamming the brakes on a multibillion-dollar hiring spree amid fears of an AI bubble. > amid fears of an AI bubble Who told the…
Whoever designed this should be fired: https://ibb.co/yGHf2yB
Fun.
> The interesting thing for me about this particular tale is the commercial genesis of Airbus and the incentives of the management team have led it to catch up despite Boeing have a 20-year head start. But Boeing…
"Friend" has multiple definitions, including: > someone who is not an enemy and who you can trust Here's another: > a person who you know well and who you like a lot Don't you think it's beneficial to trust and like…
> The reason SPAs became the default wasn’t because they were better. It was because, for a while, they were the only way to deliver something that felt fluid. So they were better.
So that nonsense didn't even help? Great.
> As it has become more and more untenable for anti-EV propagandists to deny the air quality benefits of EVs, a common refrain from them has become “but tailpipe emissions aren’t everything, what about brakes and tires,…
The cookie banner reappears indefinitely on this website when I click 'only necessary' lol.
But why? These apps are ineffective. If you want to learn a language, don't waste your time on Duolingo or this...
Yeah, I was thinking the same. How we "talk" to llms is more about us than about them. For me it's natural to say "please" without thinking twice. I didn't even think about that until recently.
> Why does it have to be always only English? Because a lot of people already know English. You can find good candidates anywhere, bring them together, and they will be able to work together. That's the advantage of…
/me cires in Estonian
Although I have a smartphone, I understand the problem. It amazes me how many businesses create so many unnecessary obstacles between the user and the purchase these days. It doesn't make sense to me.
That's a fun project. But I wonder: is it a good idea to connect to the internet from these old systems?
I agree. All they had to do was to copy mIRC!
What is better than the Swiss cheese model or its derivatives? Planes still crash from time to time, but nobody is saying that the model is wrong as the reliability is insane.