The beauty of it is cases like Google's. They have this bizarre 2FA security-theater Google Authenticator thing, but then nearly force everyone to have their phonenumber as a "backup device". Guess what the send you…
Those numbers are from 2009 through 2015. That's just cherry picking, because those years just happen to include Anders Breivik. I think its well established that the US is the market leader in mass shootings. Edit:…
I agree with everything you said, however > The more likely cause is the legal structure around gun ownership in the United States. Gun ownership may be an enabler in mass shootings, but I don't believe it's the cause.…
> If you accept the idea that a penchant for math is randomly distributed among all people That would seem rather detached from reality.
> A smartphone isnt required It is for Whatsapp. Not only for sign-up, but actually all communication on the web version goes through the app running on your phone. The web "session" times out constantly, so I'd have to…
Because NATting encapsulates while routing doesn't? And encapsulation is the whole idea behind containers. Until everything is ready for IPv6 (lol, yeah right), NATting seems the only way to me.
Does the author have any evidence that's it's typically white males? Is the author implying that white males are to blame for draconic / legalistic Wikipedia? Has the author proven that draconic wikipedia editting is a…
> Obviously no one would ever run something like this 1 vm per request thing irl. I can see plenty of use-cases for doing just that. Large uploads, time-consuming request/responses such as server-side data processing,…
> Feynman argues for unit tests I'm not sure that would be my takeaway from that quote. In the analogy of Unit testing, the test would have found the cracks in the turbine blades. It seems to me that Feynman…
I used to run an abandoned warez site when I was young. I received a lot of cease and desist letters from "lawyers". They usually failed to identify the infringing material, failed to show they had the right to act on…
> A well designed ui should be learnable while being used Strongly disagree with that one. A UI that lets you work in the most efficient way (e.g. vi) can also be well designed, even if it's incredibly difficult to…
It seems everybody has different goals for UBI. Getting unemployed people to work is not one I've encountered before I think. I fail to see how giving everybody free money is going to get unemployed people to work. For…
Traditional social programs are a safety net for single people like those going through divorce and such. Under UBI, it just puts a lot more pressure on those people, while at the same time alleviating the pressure on…
> If UBI = $1 / person, then the difference in pressure is small. The pressure might be small, but it's still there. The €1 still has to come from somewhere. > Also, you presume that people only work for money. I think…
I still haven't found an solution anywhere for the following problem: Living (not just housing, but everything) expenses are a lot less for dual, or even triple, income households than for single people. So there's…
By "focus" i mean the current window on your desktop that has the focus, as in, the one that's going to receive the input you give through your keyboard. I've seen plenty of people (and it's happened to me too) fumble…
> there was a study that said the most effective way to fight stupidity is by ridicule Unless people are just trolling, in which case both trying to ridicule or educate them is not gonna work. Just ignore them. Don't…
> These sites already have access to all of your data (stored in their databases!) The assumption for most people is going to be that they have the data that you explicitly sent them. Implicitly gathering and sending…
> Could a website that has a keylogger in it potentially pick up these keystrokes Yes of course. All it takes is misclicking and having the focus on a wrong window, and you're toast.
Whenever someone complains about a website not working without javascript enabled, someone inevitably responds "it's 2017, you can expect javascript to be enabled". I think that piece of knowledge is outdated: - Late…
You're welcome! I think I should stress the point that people will pay more for stupid things such as lessons than they will for actually useful things. For example, you can charge twice as much for teaching people how…
Not being in the US, not trusting PayPal and wanting absolutely nothing to do with any kind of blockchain currency. It's interesting that we have much simpler payment methods available in the EU, but apparently EU…
All kinds really. From transitioning companies to modern CI/CD practices to security counseling to integration work to helping out with automation and such. It's about 50% low level tech stuff and %50 advisements.
The higher you charge, the more horrible your consultancy job will be generally ;-) I've found €200 to be the sweet spot between actually doing useful tech work and being in nonsense meetings all day.
True, but expectations are sometimes also higher. Documentation etc has to be of good quality. Packaging. Stuff like that. There's really no comparing it with a paid job IMHO. It's more fun i'd say.
The beauty of it is cases like Google's. They have this bizarre 2FA security-theater Google Authenticator thing, but then nearly force everyone to have their phonenumber as a "backup device". Guess what the send you…
Those numbers are from 2009 through 2015. That's just cherry picking, because those years just happen to include Anders Breivik. I think its well established that the US is the market leader in mass shootings. Edit:…
I agree with everything you said, however > The more likely cause is the legal structure around gun ownership in the United States. Gun ownership may be an enabler in mass shootings, but I don't believe it's the cause.…
> If you accept the idea that a penchant for math is randomly distributed among all people That would seem rather detached from reality.
> A smartphone isnt required It is for Whatsapp. Not only for sign-up, but actually all communication on the web version goes through the app running on your phone. The web "session" times out constantly, so I'd have to…
Because NATting encapsulates while routing doesn't? And encapsulation is the whole idea behind containers. Until everything is ready for IPv6 (lol, yeah right), NATting seems the only way to me.
Does the author have any evidence that's it's typically white males? Is the author implying that white males are to blame for draconic / legalistic Wikipedia? Has the author proven that draconic wikipedia editting is a…
> Obviously no one would ever run something like this 1 vm per request thing irl. I can see plenty of use-cases for doing just that. Large uploads, time-consuming request/responses such as server-side data processing,…
> Feynman argues for unit tests I'm not sure that would be my takeaway from that quote. In the analogy of Unit testing, the test would have found the cracks in the turbine blades. It seems to me that Feynman…
I used to run an abandoned warez site when I was young. I received a lot of cease and desist letters from "lawyers". They usually failed to identify the infringing material, failed to show they had the right to act on…
> A well designed ui should be learnable while being used Strongly disagree with that one. A UI that lets you work in the most efficient way (e.g. vi) can also be well designed, even if it's incredibly difficult to…
It seems everybody has different goals for UBI. Getting unemployed people to work is not one I've encountered before I think. I fail to see how giving everybody free money is going to get unemployed people to work. For…
Traditional social programs are a safety net for single people like those going through divorce and such. Under UBI, it just puts a lot more pressure on those people, while at the same time alleviating the pressure on…
> If UBI = $1 / person, then the difference in pressure is small. The pressure might be small, but it's still there. The €1 still has to come from somewhere. > Also, you presume that people only work for money. I think…
I still haven't found an solution anywhere for the following problem: Living (not just housing, but everything) expenses are a lot less for dual, or even triple, income households than for single people. So there's…
By "focus" i mean the current window on your desktop that has the focus, as in, the one that's going to receive the input you give through your keyboard. I've seen plenty of people (and it's happened to me too) fumble…
> there was a study that said the most effective way to fight stupidity is by ridicule Unless people are just trolling, in which case both trying to ridicule or educate them is not gonna work. Just ignore them. Don't…
> These sites already have access to all of your data (stored in their databases!) The assumption for most people is going to be that they have the data that you explicitly sent them. Implicitly gathering and sending…
> Could a website that has a keylogger in it potentially pick up these keystrokes Yes of course. All it takes is misclicking and having the focus on a wrong window, and you're toast.
Whenever someone complains about a website not working without javascript enabled, someone inevitably responds "it's 2017, you can expect javascript to be enabled". I think that piece of knowledge is outdated: - Late…
You're welcome! I think I should stress the point that people will pay more for stupid things such as lessons than they will for actually useful things. For example, you can charge twice as much for teaching people how…
Not being in the US, not trusting PayPal and wanting absolutely nothing to do with any kind of blockchain currency. It's interesting that we have much simpler payment methods available in the EU, but apparently EU…
All kinds really. From transitioning companies to modern CI/CD practices to security counseling to integration work to helping out with automation and such. It's about 50% low level tech stuff and %50 advisements.
The higher you charge, the more horrible your consultancy job will be generally ;-) I've found €200 to be the sweet spot between actually doing useful tech work and being in nonsense meetings all day.
True, but expectations are sometimes also higher. Documentation etc has to be of good quality. Packaging. Stuff like that. There's really no comparing it with a paid job IMHO. It's more fun i'd say.