What's that? Any particular dosage?
That may be, but I think you are missing the point of the outrage: this solution is not good.
It can be great, but I've noticed lag during screen sharing. Other colleagues have noticed it too. Even so... it's better than slack for audio/video and my organization uses teams as primary for calls and slack for text…
What do you mean by "series A"? :) I never hid the scripts. The automation was out in the open and everybody in the team was making use of them. I quit because I didn't receive pay raise and wouldn't have in that…
That's how I became a software developer. I was working for a big tech firm as a data entry "specialist". Everything (except some pricing calculations) was done manually. I was hired as the 7th member of the team. It…
setTimeout doesn't guarantee that it will execute exactly after 3000. (() => { const targ = $(".setGo"); const targ2 = $(".theSport > div:nth-child(2)"); const observer = new MutationObserver((mutations, observer) => {…
Nice :) What library did you use for the graphics?
I don't know much about the history of these tests. Can Hanlon's razor principle be applied here?
What's that? Any particular dosage?
That may be, but I think you are missing the point of the outrage: this solution is not good.
It can be great, but I've noticed lag during screen sharing. Other colleagues have noticed it too. Even so... it's better than slack for audio/video and my organization uses teams as primary for calls and slack for text…
What do you mean by "series A"? :) I never hid the scripts. The automation was out in the open and everybody in the team was making use of them. I quit because I didn't receive pay raise and wouldn't have in that…
That's how I became a software developer. I was working for a big tech firm as a data entry "specialist". Everything (except some pricing calculations) was done manually. I was hired as the 7th member of the team. It…
setTimeout doesn't guarantee that it will execute exactly after 3000. (() => { const targ = $(".setGo"); const targ2 = $(".theSport > div:nth-child(2)"); const observer = new MutationObserver((mutations, observer) => {…
Nice :) What library did you use for the graphics?
I don't know much about the history of these tests. Can Hanlon's razor principle be applied here?