The world cup half-time tea break spike. The load of millions of electric kettles boiling in unison. All the nation's toilets also flush repeatedly at much the same time, which was a central plot point in the film…
You made a product where people compete to pay you the most? That's hilarious
But jira isn't the problem that's being solved - a person hired full time would be a project manager, who in the absence of jira, would solve the project management problem with different tools. Jira is not perfect. But…
Learning pandas really does feel like learning a new language - new syntax, idioms and implementation details to be aware of. Much more so than other libraries imo. Given how utterly powerful it is, I think that's OK.…
This is your take-away?
Right, but then you're ignoring ambient light. Your statement isn't true in a dark room, where the very much does care.
This is uninformed and unsubstantiated. The answer depends massively on the intended use case.
The adverts are right there on the page still. Why would it be more profitable to send users to the BBC website?
> Take for an example the UK referendum to leave the EU. Even though it's overall a complete shitshow, and all sides usually agree on that, nobody can really claim that it wasn't a democratic decision. Was it a smart…
The world cup half-time tea break spike. The load of millions of electric kettles boiling in unison. All the nation's toilets also flush repeatedly at much the same time, which was a central plot point in the film…
You made a product where people compete to pay you the most? That's hilarious
But jira isn't the problem that's being solved - a person hired full time would be a project manager, who in the absence of jira, would solve the project management problem with different tools. Jira is not perfect. But…
Learning pandas really does feel like learning a new language - new syntax, idioms and implementation details to be aware of. Much more so than other libraries imo. Given how utterly powerful it is, I think that's OK.…
This is your take-away?
Right, but then you're ignoring ambient light. Your statement isn't true in a dark room, where the very much does care.
This is uninformed and unsubstantiated. The answer depends massively on the intended use case.
The adverts are right there on the page still. Why would it be more profitable to send users to the BBC website?
> Take for an example the UK referendum to leave the EU. Even though it's overall a complete shitshow, and all sides usually agree on that, nobody can really claim that it wasn't a democratic decision. Was it a smart…