fndex
No user record in our sample, but fndex has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but fndex has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Thanks for the advice.
Could you explain a bit more how you are using it?
>those other ecosystems still need Kubernetes, Kafka, Redis and GRPC, to get by And what makes Elixir not need Kafka, Redis or GRPC? Instead of Redis, you could use ETS for caching. But once you have 2+ instances of…
This is coming from someone who likes Elixir. Not much for its distributed systems features, but mostly because of the language design. I keep hearing everyone talk about how Erlang/Elixir gives everything out of the…
> I actually find Clojure's syntax more confusing with all the punctuation they threw at it. Could you give some examples? Or "all the punctuation" you are referring just to []?
Just get over it. Semantics are much more important than syntax. Every language will have some piece of syntax you won't like.
"The problem is not capitalism"... Proceeds to describe capitalism.
https://blog.datomic.com/2023/04/datomic-is-free.html
> I just wish there was a way to get the powerful to understand that it's not a one way relationship I guarantee you, they do understand that. This is not a matter of changing individuals by teaching them and "getting…
That's valid, but saying that a product a few developers created for FREE, and made open source so anyone could copy and change is the "wrong thing to copy" is just disrespectful.
Bugzilla still exists. And if you think something is the wrong thing to copy, just copy the "right" thing yourself.
One could argue that C++ is much more complex and hard to write correct code.
There are multiple links in this thread showing how the media lied multiple times in the past, a whole documentary interviewing defectors who want to go back and telling how the South Korean Intelligence Service coerce…
LOL. Alright then, Mr New York Times.
That is a much better analysis. I believe they do have some weird cult of personality going on, but that is very different from being "indoctrinated".
And what does this article proof? Again, it has zero evidence. If everyone knows, should be easy to back up your claims with atual evidence.
"A big thanks to Yeonmi Park for sharing her story with us" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeonmi_Park#Veracity_of_claims
How dare you presenting facts that the media has lied multiple times about North Korea in the past? Be prepared to be downvoted and flagged.
I'm not the one insinuating that North Koreans are indoctrinated into thinking the great leader has magic powers. You should be the ones to present the sources to such bizarre claims. Jesus, the guy is saying people are…
Sorry, I'm not following. Could you rephrase your question? Are you asking me if I believe North Koreans should have the right to travel freely? If so, yes, I do believe that.
Now that's a good argument.
This article could have come straight from a fiction book. There is no evidence for anything that is being presented. It might be true, it might not be. I'm not arguing they are lying or not, I'm just saying that we…
I see where you are coming from, and I'm not saying that North Korean media or propaganda is reliable or the absolute truth. But does that mean the US "side" is reliable? Is the US really on the "right side" of the…
Absolutely. I would definitely not like to live or even visit there. I just think that every story has 2 sides, and we don't hear the other side very often.
I'm sure you learned all that from other US/South Korean articles like this one, right? I watched a documentary about North Korean defectors that wanted to go back to North Korea, one of the many reasons was to be with…