> Nerds got computers because they liked them. Then gamers got them to play games on. But it was connecting to other people that got everyone else I've never seen anyone completely write IBM and Microsoft out of…
I believe the difference here is that one is an ORM framework, while the other is just objects bound to a database. ORM frameworks usually allow you to drop down to SQL. But then you're stuck in that terrible world of…
Of course reddit is flawed. Anyone that has spent time on Slashdot or Advogato could have told you the whole premise of up/down voting is beyond silly. No, the utility of up/down votes is in retention. It's nothing more…
it's only going to be useful to understand how a kernel works, as an overview. But the specifics (ext2?) are horribly dated.
> Nerds got computers because they liked them. Then gamers got them to play games on. But it was connecting to other people that got everyone else I've never seen anyone completely write IBM and Microsoft out of…
I believe the difference here is that one is an ORM framework, while the other is just objects bound to a database. ORM frameworks usually allow you to drop down to SQL. But then you're stuck in that terrible world of…
Of course reddit is flawed. Anyone that has spent time on Slashdot or Advogato could have told you the whole premise of up/down voting is beyond silly. No, the utility of up/down votes is in retention. It's nothing more…
it's only going to be useful to understand how a kernel works, as an overview. But the specifics (ext2?) are horribly dated.