Automated deployments would have allowed you to review the deployment before it happened. A failed deployment could be configured to allow automatic rollbacks. Automated deployments should also handle experiment flags,…
Well, if someone goes to prison for a relatively harmless drug, they're more likely to turn to hard drugs. For hard drugs it can probably help centers do things like safe injection sites. Legalization also means you can…
> Imagine not being yelled at or ridiculed or told to figure it out if what you're asked to do is ambiguous or makes no sense. I think maybe you just worked at a terrible business. You experience contacting sounds more…
> This is just bad journalism. It's possible you just have poor taste. Personally, I think the reasons for the repair cost aren't relevant, same is pretty obvious. It's an unconventional car that had limited production.…
> While most Lyme disease patients who are diagnosed and treated early can fully recover, 10 to 20 percent suffer from persistent symptoms, some seriously disabling. There's no evidence that chronic Lyme exists: > There…
One advantage here is for well-lit areas, like if you have a window seat. More light makes the kaleido display sharper, rather than making it frustrating. It can change how you lay out your office, and make things like…
Just to add to other things people have mentioned, reports of ghosts could very easily be the result of false memories, as well. Finding a dead body in a creepy location, then sitting on it for two years is plenty of…
It seems like "artifact provenance" or something would have been a better term. Is this related to SLSA?
Users of kakoune, like myself. What I don't understand is why this is seem as such a big deal. You spend most of your workday in your editor of choice. It's not that big a deal to spend a day or two getting used to the…
Why wouldn't they be able to? A milk is just a consumable suspension. Look to milk of magnesia, milk of the poppy, etc. It has a long history of being used in a general sense.
Well, it's good I didn't imply that, then. People can miss things in articles, ignore them, or just not understand. All are valid reasons for missing/ignoring that part. My point is that the article doesn't mention it…
Most of the comments here are implying that there is some environmental change which has caused breastfeeding to become harder or less efficient. The article doesn't seem to say that, though. I didn't see any…
I never get all the Apple fanboy love for their trackpads. They're okay, but ultimately they are still trackpads. They still erroneously track input when you brush against them the wrong way. I prefer the Thinkpad…
At least part of it is trying to save people work, I imagine. "That's a cool tool, but there's an existing, well-supported one that already solves those problem." Of course, the problem here is that Nix may be similar…
Not when it's referentially transparent. In that case, there's no need to run the tests if a function or its children haven't changed. Of course, in that's the case, the tests are probably fast enough that running then…
Many of us pay for government services we will never use, though. As a man, for example, I'll never be a recipient of WIC. By your logic, I should never have to pay for these benefits. However, that seems wrong. Even if…
> knowing is harder to get adequate nutrition It's really not, though. Not any harder than in a meat eating diet. Maybe if you're following a vegan diet. Or if you have specific health concerns (like low iron…
Mastodon is written in Rails, I think. What makes you say that it will be an instance written in Django?
> intelligence is needed for safe driving... won't get when something unexpected arises as it always will in time I don't think that's true. While unexpected situations do arise, I don't think people use much…
If we're going to start slinging blame, let's start where it's most appropriate: these farms should never have existed in the first place. Other countries have banned them, and the US should as well.
Most of the time that will likely be fruitless. Companies don't comment on why they made their employment decisions because it opens them up to be sued, with no benefit to them. (At my current company, they warn us not…
Because they accepted terms of service that explicitly stated what information can be collected.
> "it works for me" gives very little information about the software you're using. I don't think so. It says that the software satisfies the basic requirements of its target audience, and gives a hint as to who that…
> No Pebble user ever consented to their health data being sold to Google, but all of this is legal. You're saying that Pebble users didn't sign a contract detailing use of data? That seems highly irregular.
I think the text editor, [Kakoune](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune), was written as an experiment in modern C++ language features. Its documentation says it requires a C++20 compiler, though I don't imagine it was…
Automated deployments would have allowed you to review the deployment before it happened. A failed deployment could be configured to allow automatic rollbacks. Automated deployments should also handle experiment flags,…
Well, if someone goes to prison for a relatively harmless drug, they're more likely to turn to hard drugs. For hard drugs it can probably help centers do things like safe injection sites. Legalization also means you can…
> Imagine not being yelled at or ridiculed or told to figure it out if what you're asked to do is ambiguous or makes no sense. I think maybe you just worked at a terrible business. You experience contacting sounds more…
> This is just bad journalism. It's possible you just have poor taste. Personally, I think the reasons for the repair cost aren't relevant, same is pretty obvious. It's an unconventional car that had limited production.…
> While most Lyme disease patients who are diagnosed and treated early can fully recover, 10 to 20 percent suffer from persistent symptoms, some seriously disabling. There's no evidence that chronic Lyme exists: > There…
One advantage here is for well-lit areas, like if you have a window seat. More light makes the kaleido display sharper, rather than making it frustrating. It can change how you lay out your office, and make things like…
Just to add to other things people have mentioned, reports of ghosts could very easily be the result of false memories, as well. Finding a dead body in a creepy location, then sitting on it for two years is plenty of…
It seems like "artifact provenance" or something would have been a better term. Is this related to SLSA?
Users of kakoune, like myself. What I don't understand is why this is seem as such a big deal. You spend most of your workday in your editor of choice. It's not that big a deal to spend a day or two getting used to the…
Why wouldn't they be able to? A milk is just a consumable suspension. Look to milk of magnesia, milk of the poppy, etc. It has a long history of being used in a general sense.
Well, it's good I didn't imply that, then. People can miss things in articles, ignore them, or just not understand. All are valid reasons for missing/ignoring that part. My point is that the article doesn't mention it…
Most of the comments here are implying that there is some environmental change which has caused breastfeeding to become harder or less efficient. The article doesn't seem to say that, though. I didn't see any…
I never get all the Apple fanboy love for their trackpads. They're okay, but ultimately they are still trackpads. They still erroneously track input when you brush against them the wrong way. I prefer the Thinkpad…
At least part of it is trying to save people work, I imagine. "That's a cool tool, but there's an existing, well-supported one that already solves those problem." Of course, the problem here is that Nix may be similar…
Not when it's referentially transparent. In that case, there's no need to run the tests if a function or its children haven't changed. Of course, in that's the case, the tests are probably fast enough that running then…
Many of us pay for government services we will never use, though. As a man, for example, I'll never be a recipient of WIC. By your logic, I should never have to pay for these benefits. However, that seems wrong. Even if…
> knowing is harder to get adequate nutrition It's really not, though. Not any harder than in a meat eating diet. Maybe if you're following a vegan diet. Or if you have specific health concerns (like low iron…
Mastodon is written in Rails, I think. What makes you say that it will be an instance written in Django?
> intelligence is needed for safe driving... won't get when something unexpected arises as it always will in time I don't think that's true. While unexpected situations do arise, I don't think people use much…
If we're going to start slinging blame, let's start where it's most appropriate: these farms should never have existed in the first place. Other countries have banned them, and the US should as well.
Most of the time that will likely be fruitless. Companies don't comment on why they made their employment decisions because it opens them up to be sued, with no benefit to them. (At my current company, they warn us not…
Because they accepted terms of service that explicitly stated what information can be collected.
> "it works for me" gives very little information about the software you're using. I don't think so. It says that the software satisfies the basic requirements of its target audience, and gives a hint as to who that…
> No Pebble user ever consented to their health data being sold to Google, but all of this is legal. You're saying that Pebble users didn't sign a contract detailing use of data? That seems highly irregular.
I think the text editor, [Kakoune](https://github.com/mawww/kakoune), was written as an experiment in modern C++ language features. Its documentation says it requires a C++20 compiler, though I don't imagine it was…