What? You have to be authenticated as a superuser or other role with a very specific privilege.
> Immune response in reaction to what? Autoimmune diseases like Crohn's and colitis?
> Go is type safe Functions that accept or return the interface{} type are not type-safe. These are _common_.
The part of this argument I don't really understand is that it seems like the cost of bad programmers is higher, not lower, with a "simple" language where it's _normal_ to have type-unsafe code and mutable state…
For almost all jobs at SpaceX, only permanent residency (i.e., a green card) is required, because that's what ITAR and EAR require. But, yes, of course companies have no choice but to exclude non-citizens from jobs that…
I'm not sure what your search query is supposed to prove. That something is rare doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I have personally used this YAML feature, albeit very rarely, obviously.
>it can be considered a form of vigilantism No. Vigilantism is extralegal. A lawsuit is by definition not vigilantism.
It is a strange, strange world in which Uber is considered "tech" but turning around a rocket after it's boosted a payload toward orbit and then landing it back on earth exactly where intended isn't technologically…
> You're comparing a Mazda 3, which is an economy car, against an entry-level luxury sedan. This is a bad comparison. Indeed, that was my point. The claim that "'economy' cars like the Honda Civic, Mazda 3, Toyota…
> There's no reason to buy any other car. This seems beyond out-of-touch. There are plenty of good reasons. Cost, size, and the fact that you might need a car now and can't actually buy a Model 3 yet would be chief…
Yes, it seems pretty common to spend $35k on a vehicle, and of course people buying $35k sedans are in the Model 3 market, but I don't think that includes even new small economy car buyers. It would be difficult to…
I think I'd resign if someone in a position to be reviewing Python code scolded me for using a list/dict/set/generator comprehension.
But Go and Java are both compiled, garbage-collected languages.
> As much as I absolutely detest the likes of Donald Trump, I wouldn't be surprised if even he acted in a similar way in that situation. Then I invite you to read…
They've literally recklessly endangered human lives. This isn't a game.
And if we completely address hunger, poverty, disease, nuclear proliferation, terrorism, sectarian violence, economic inequality, etc. but then an asteroid or comet causes our extinction?
Agreed. This topic has always felt to me like bikeshedding at its worst.
If you just call and tell them you're moving to an area that Comcast doesn't service, they don't give you any hassle at all.
Plus you'd probably have to remove your shoes and there'd probably be a force sensor under your butt.
> What machine? Can't I just imagine it's a Magic 8 Ball instead? I mean, measuring perspiration, pulse, breathing, and movement is perhaps a step above a Magic 8 Ball. I too am entirely doubtful that anyone can…
> He said put a thumb tack in your shoe The examiner can just require subjects to remove their shoes.
> the interviewer required Heath "to read the program coding over the phone." Yeah, if that actually happened, Google should fire the interviewer. How incredibly absurd.
I love Atlanta, but let's be real: the northwest side of town is getting better but it is hardly "perfectly safe". People have been held up at gunpoint on 10th Street where I walked daily, literally across the road from…
> The verdict seems clear (based solely on the data in the post) that ultrajson is the winner. ultrajson isn't a drop-in replacement, though, because it doesn't support sort_keys.
I had one with Cherry MX Clear switches, and found the switches still too hard to press, perhaps because the keyboard itself seems very tall. The CODE keyboards are rather thick (but incredibly well constructed), and…
What? You have to be authenticated as a superuser or other role with a very specific privilege.
> Immune response in reaction to what? Autoimmune diseases like Crohn's and colitis?
> Go is type safe Functions that accept or return the interface{} type are not type-safe. These are _common_.
The part of this argument I don't really understand is that it seems like the cost of bad programmers is higher, not lower, with a "simple" language where it's _normal_ to have type-unsafe code and mutable state…
For almost all jobs at SpaceX, only permanent residency (i.e., a green card) is required, because that's what ITAR and EAR require. But, yes, of course companies have no choice but to exclude non-citizens from jobs that…
I'm not sure what your search query is supposed to prove. That something is rare doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I have personally used this YAML feature, albeit very rarely, obviously.
>it can be considered a form of vigilantism No. Vigilantism is extralegal. A lawsuit is by definition not vigilantism.
It is a strange, strange world in which Uber is considered "tech" but turning around a rocket after it's boosted a payload toward orbit and then landing it back on earth exactly where intended isn't technologically…
> You're comparing a Mazda 3, which is an economy car, against an entry-level luxury sedan. This is a bad comparison. Indeed, that was my point. The claim that "'economy' cars like the Honda Civic, Mazda 3, Toyota…
> There's no reason to buy any other car. This seems beyond out-of-touch. There are plenty of good reasons. Cost, size, and the fact that you might need a car now and can't actually buy a Model 3 yet would be chief…
Yes, it seems pretty common to spend $35k on a vehicle, and of course people buying $35k sedans are in the Model 3 market, but I don't think that includes even new small economy car buyers. It would be difficult to…
I think I'd resign if someone in a position to be reviewing Python code scolded me for using a list/dict/set/generator comprehension.
But Go and Java are both compiled, garbage-collected languages.
> As much as I absolutely detest the likes of Donald Trump, I wouldn't be surprised if even he acted in a similar way in that situation. Then I invite you to read…
They've literally recklessly endangered human lives. This isn't a game.
And if we completely address hunger, poverty, disease, nuclear proliferation, terrorism, sectarian violence, economic inequality, etc. but then an asteroid or comet causes our extinction?
Agreed. This topic has always felt to me like bikeshedding at its worst.
If you just call and tell them you're moving to an area that Comcast doesn't service, they don't give you any hassle at all.
Plus you'd probably have to remove your shoes and there'd probably be a force sensor under your butt.
> What machine? Can't I just imagine it's a Magic 8 Ball instead? I mean, measuring perspiration, pulse, breathing, and movement is perhaps a step above a Magic 8 Ball. I too am entirely doubtful that anyone can…
> He said put a thumb tack in your shoe The examiner can just require subjects to remove their shoes.
> the interviewer required Heath "to read the program coding over the phone." Yeah, if that actually happened, Google should fire the interviewer. How incredibly absurd.
I love Atlanta, but let's be real: the northwest side of town is getting better but it is hardly "perfectly safe". People have been held up at gunpoint on 10th Street where I walked daily, literally across the road from…
> The verdict seems clear (based solely on the data in the post) that ultrajson is the winner. ultrajson isn't a drop-in replacement, though, because it doesn't support sort_keys.
I had one with Cherry MX Clear switches, and found the switches still too hard to press, perhaps because the keyboard itself seems very tall. The CODE keyboards are rather thick (but incredibly well constructed), and…