But which “you” matters here? Is it the you of the current moment, next hour, tomorrow, next month, etc…? Any activity you do regularly and consistently will bring about different emotions and states of mind on…
For (b), would also be really awesome if they explained how they chose these numbers. Given how specific it is, a salary of 197,819 seems to be derived from some function (e.g. average salary for a senior engineer…
Heads up, I get an invalid certificate error when trying to visit your site.
> and if you move to a state with no income tax, you might not even lose almost any net income. If you relocate from NY to a no tax state, but are still basically working for the NY office, you might be taxed as a…
Why is it useless for actually protecting users? Is it easily circumventable or is it just that there are simpler attack vectors that don't require modifying kernel code?
I respect wanting or needing to do this with just the builtin datetime module. For everyone else, I recommend relativedelta from the dateutil package: https://dateutil.readthedocs.io/en/stable/relativedelta.html e.g.:…
But which “you” matters here? Is it the you of the current moment, next hour, tomorrow, next month, etc…? Any activity you do regularly and consistently will bring about different emotions and states of mind on…
For (b), would also be really awesome if they explained how they chose these numbers. Given how specific it is, a salary of 197,819 seems to be derived from some function (e.g. average salary for a senior engineer…
Heads up, I get an invalid certificate error when trying to visit your site.
> and if you move to a state with no income tax, you might not even lose almost any net income. If you relocate from NY to a no tax state, but are still basically working for the NY office, you might be taxed as a…
Why is it useless for actually protecting users? Is it easily circumventable or is it just that there are simpler attack vectors that don't require modifying kernel code?
I respect wanting or needing to do this with just the builtin datetime module. For everyone else, I recommend relativedelta from the dateutil package: https://dateutil.readthedocs.io/en/stable/relativedelta.html e.g.:…