Well yeah, engineers should participate; not only as senators.
According to the article, this "free" service comes at the cost of their readers privacy, not being in control of your whole blog (comments) and increased loading time because of the size/requests needed.
If the book is documentation, I only read as needed. > Do you read it in one go and later try examples or go through entire book by trying all examples? I do a few of the examples until I learn and figure out how the…
I've experienced improvements on AntergOS with Firefox 57, also tried those pages.
The main reason I read this thread was to compare both announcements.
Now this is ridiculous. Thanks for sharing this article.
Which is difficult to control over a social network unless it's a closed community and still, it's used as a metric.
This is fine for most people; the "interaction" nowadays (likes, retweets, ...) doesn't really represent support but a lack of communication skill from the consumer. When someone likes something without anything to say…
So far, Unix as IDE[1] is my favorite for all of them. Debugging is a bit of a pain sometimes, but can make it work. [1]: https://sanctum.geek.nz/arabesque/series/unix-as-ide/
Found some people to chat, mostly from here which is cool. Hi, Jason
Well yeah, engineers should participate; not only as senators.
According to the article, this "free" service comes at the cost of their readers privacy, not being in control of your whole blog (comments) and increased loading time because of the size/requests needed.
If the book is documentation, I only read as needed. > Do you read it in one go and later try examples or go through entire book by trying all examples? I do a few of the examples until I learn and figure out how the…
I've experienced improvements on AntergOS with Firefox 57, also tried those pages.
The main reason I read this thread was to compare both announcements.
Now this is ridiculous. Thanks for sharing this article.
Which is difficult to control over a social network unless it's a closed community and still, it's used as a metric.
This is fine for most people; the "interaction" nowadays (likes, retweets, ...) doesn't really represent support but a lack of communication skill from the consumer. When someone likes something without anything to say…
So far, Unix as IDE[1] is my favorite for all of them. Debugging is a bit of a pain sometimes, but can make it work. [1]: https://sanctum.geek.nz/arabesque/series/unix-as-ide/
Found some people to chat, mostly from here which is cool. Hi, Jason