What kind of reasons? Old stuff like mafia or instead something (semi-)factual like our relaxed relationship with time management?
That's interesting. Are you aware of any stereotype about/against italians?
An ironic thing to say in a seed accelerator-owned website.
Of course, but I was talking about the incentives of an average user, which I'm not sure care about security as much as we do. Just to make what I'm saying more concrete: most people in my home town in Sicily think it's…
Yes, and so does MS: https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/01/skyla...
I think there's an obvious and more general question here to be answered: if a piece of software is good enough, namely, it "disappears" when you are trying to do your job, then why bother to change it? Yes, the new…
that was... anticlimactic, to say the least.
Well, yes and no. As you know, the italian train system can be divided in two layers: "Le Frecce", fast trains that only stop in important cities and "Regionali", (relatively) slow trains that stop even in tiny towns.…
This was a very interesting read, thanks for sharing it with us. As an italian, however, I've to say that wolf-calls here are definitely perceived as very rude and as a thing of the past.
What kind of reasons? Old stuff like mafia or instead something (semi-)factual like our relaxed relationship with time management?
That's interesting. Are you aware of any stereotype about/against italians?
An ironic thing to say in a seed accelerator-owned website.
Of course, but I was talking about the incentives of an average user, which I'm not sure care about security as much as we do. Just to make what I'm saying more concrete: most people in my home town in Sicily think it's…
Yes, and so does MS: https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/01/skyla...
I think there's an obvious and more general question here to be answered: if a piece of software is good enough, namely, it "disappears" when you are trying to do your job, then why bother to change it? Yes, the new…
that was... anticlimactic, to say the least.
Well, yes and no. As you know, the italian train system can be divided in two layers: "Le Frecce", fast trains that only stop in important cities and "Regionali", (relatively) slow trains that stop even in tiny towns.…
This was a very interesting read, thanks for sharing it with us. As an italian, however, I've to say that wolf-calls here are definitely perceived as very rude and as a thing of the past.