And this is a problem. Lowest-bidder-wins always creates a race to the bottom. At least in the province of Venice, there was a complicated set of rules to pick between bidders of public contractors - so the law is…
In several places where I lived the public transport road service was subcontracted to the lowest-bidding private company of the region. This in turn creates this shitty illusion of "public" service that nobody wants to…
Pretty much any city in EU has now some forms of traffic restriction policies. The same is true for where I live as well. The issue is not really the restriction, but the lack of alternatives. Very few cities have a…
I do use noto for this, but absolutely hate the use of color in glyphs such as the emojis.
In my limited experience, I'm not sure it's an advantage. You do get to break the ice faster during interviews and contacting new clients. But it can easily backfire as well: people will ask why "project X" is not up to…
This has been discussed before and it has been true for me as well. I don't have a large, super-popular package I maintain, but several lesser known ones, some of which I wrote, and several of which I just adopted and…
And this is a problem. Lowest-bidder-wins always creates a race to the bottom. At least in the province of Venice, there was a complicated set of rules to pick between bidders of public contractors - so the law is…
In several places where I lived the public transport road service was subcontracted to the lowest-bidding private company of the region. This in turn creates this shitty illusion of "public" service that nobody wants to…
Pretty much any city in EU has now some forms of traffic restriction policies. The same is true for where I live as well. The issue is not really the restriction, but the lack of alternatives. Very few cities have a…
I do use noto for this, but absolutely hate the use of color in glyphs such as the emojis.
In my limited experience, I'm not sure it's an advantage. You do get to break the ice faster during interviews and contacting new clients. But it can easily backfire as well: people will ask why "project X" is not up to…
This has been discussed before and it has been true for me as well. I don't have a large, super-popular package I maintain, but several lesser known ones, some of which I wrote, and several of which I just adopted and…