In Turkey, iPhone Pro 17 costs $2,610, yet there are still queues outside Apple stores. Considering that the average income is much lower than in the United States, people are still willing to pay more for this phone…
Your argument relies on the idea of an "actual product", what is happening—and I’m seeing it firsthand both in my company’s codebase and in my personal projects—is that AI is contributing more and more to product…
nobody cares about english name of country.
when you look at code it's hard to recognize. if there is a way to success of a visual programming language that is the code should appeal more recognizable than text.
In Turkey, iPhone Pro 17 costs $2,610, yet there are still queues outside Apple stores. Considering that the average income is much lower than in the United States, people are still willing to pay more for this phone…
Your argument relies on the idea of an "actual product", what is happening—and I’m seeing it firsthand both in my company’s codebase and in my personal projects—is that AI is contributing more and more to product…
nobody cares about english name of country.
when you look at code it's hard to recognize. if there is a way to success of a visual programming language that is the code should appeal more recognizable than text.