Including, unfortunately, this usage of "literally."
> the author’s complaint that he doesn’t get to spend 100% of his workday coding/testing/documenting The author's complaint was that he only gets to spend 12-25% of his time on these tasks on a good day.
Wishing he had chosen a path in life like most of his drone buddies who settled down, mated with a queen, had their genitals explode, and then died immediately after?
You can see a classic example here (around 2:20): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5vnpOp0U_g
The first versions of Anki (ca 2006) were based on spaced repetition algorithms developed for a piece of software called SuperMemo, which came out 21 years earlier in 1985 [0]. Piotr Wozniak, the author of SuperMemo,…
This is exactly what Shopify does with their monolithic Rails app [1]. I worked at a company with ~200 engineers that used the same general architecture and I really enjoyed it. We got a lot of the benefits (clear…
Including, unfortunately, this usage of "literally."
> the author’s complaint that he doesn’t get to spend 100% of his workday coding/testing/documenting The author's complaint was that he only gets to spend 12-25% of his time on these tasks on a good day.
Wishing he had chosen a path in life like most of his drone buddies who settled down, mated with a queen, had their genitals explode, and then died immediately after?
You can see a classic example here (around 2:20): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U5vnpOp0U_g
The first versions of Anki (ca 2006) were based on spaced repetition algorithms developed for a piece of software called SuperMemo, which came out 21 years earlier in 1985 [0]. Piotr Wozniak, the author of SuperMemo,…
This is exactly what Shopify does with their monolithic Rails app [1]. I worked at a company with ~200 engineers that used the same general architecture and I really enjoyed it. We got a lot of the benefits (clear…