Several things remain unclear: "The beauty of this scheme is that a node only has to know about its share of the interval" The article doesn't explain curve changes in much detail, but I assume it increases the portion…
This implementation was used from 3.6, right? It's interesting that the idea mail mentions that nothing changes about the implementation (including order) but the memory layout. Which would imply insertion order was…
> and I can't explain exactly how their ordered dicts work Traditionally you simply use a doubly linked list approach on the entries (each entry maintains two additional references to the previous and next entry) for…
In the log replication example, after healing the partition the uncommitted log changes in the minority group are rolled back and the leader's log is used. However it's not clear how that log is transmitted. Until this…
Fair that perhaps they (the director specifically) thought that (they look like something nobody would want to wear) about Crocs. Heck, I thought that back then, many did. So perhaps that's why Snopes is saying it's…
Just to confirm: Are you suggesting engineers working during work hours on an alert should get paid double? Or only outside work hours? I'm not sure we're all on the same page here but let me give you an example of how…
I'm by no means important in my org but when something appears like a shitty idea I will raise that (like other ICs around me) and more often than not it works out fine. I'll agree to give something a shot but if it…
You don't remember the "What's a computer?" ad? iPads are most definitely marketed as devices suitable to take the place of conventional computers.
> Not to mention it's a crime. Doesn't that heavily depend on where the employee is based? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirmative_action_in_the_Un... Quotas are legal in many states. Granted the author is likely…
Okay, let's see then I guess? I guess this HN submission was just a teaser as well then. Maybe another one will reveal something actually interesting.
Saying they have a quota doesn't mean "because you are white". I mean, it has a similar effect but it's not like we don't know quotas exist and are largely tolerated, are they not? Are quotas outright illegal in the US?…
So, where's the actual story? I don't use X so maybe it's buried somewhere else. Even the tweet you mentioned wasn't directly discoverable from the submission. But it looks like he already tweeted months ago that this…
Not even sure it's easy to find in Japan these days to be honest. The place I knew closed a few years back.
> I mean you mention anime characters, but there's a big greaser / rockabilly subculture in Japan. There isn't, though. There are probably a dozen or so in Tokyo and about the same number in Osaka. Granted, I don't have…
Facebook is being overrun with low effort memes and repetitive video content (literally being shown the same crap in regular intervals either reposted or from the same source). I make an effort to hide and block each…
> beware though, Wikipedia is bound to lead to errors by defining the monthly rate as yearly rate / 12 Looks like all the calculators do that as well. What's the right way?
Current capacity might not be referring to actual current point in time provisioned capacity but an estimate of how much the overall infra can handle over the next few days. No idea but ultimately this is marketing. If…
That cost basis inheritance thing is done in Japan actually, on top of inheritance tax, mind you.
Websites or apps backed by a sheet or some other minimalist setup are fairly common. What's noteworthy about the submission is that the website is a sheet, not a layer to render info from one.
If you think that an engineer is replaceable, why isn't the rest of the early employees? Or do you mean that only founders should get any equity? I'm not quite sure what your comparison does. If you build a company…
Thanks for that. Looks super useful. Probably more accessible than the theory (alone).
The ergonomics of checked exceptions may be debatable but compared to golangs explicit error handling at essentially each function call is definitely worse.
From the start I was wondering if there's no way for the JVM to solve this with less cruft on the bytecode level. Of course, that doesn't mean I was aware of the challenges, just an intuition. I do think they must have…
This is as usual not universal. First, in shops people clearly ask for whether they have something. It's super common for clothes and shoes stores to have more sizes in the back. I might ask the negative form when I…
On my last question: > Why would this happen if you used alternative currency payouts for that? Is it possible you hadn't yet registered your CAD bank account on your Stripe account before starting to accept CAD…
Several things remain unclear: "The beauty of this scheme is that a node only has to know about its share of the interval" The article doesn't explain curve changes in much detail, but I assume it increases the portion…
This implementation was used from 3.6, right? It's interesting that the idea mail mentions that nothing changes about the implementation (including order) but the memory layout. Which would imply insertion order was…
> and I can't explain exactly how their ordered dicts work Traditionally you simply use a doubly linked list approach on the entries (each entry maintains two additional references to the previous and next entry) for…
In the log replication example, after healing the partition the uncommitted log changes in the minority group are rolled back and the leader's log is used. However it's not clear how that log is transmitted. Until this…
Fair that perhaps they (the director specifically) thought that (they look like something nobody would want to wear) about Crocs. Heck, I thought that back then, many did. So perhaps that's why Snopes is saying it's…
Just to confirm: Are you suggesting engineers working during work hours on an alert should get paid double? Or only outside work hours? I'm not sure we're all on the same page here but let me give you an example of how…
I'm by no means important in my org but when something appears like a shitty idea I will raise that (like other ICs around me) and more often than not it works out fine. I'll agree to give something a shot but if it…
You don't remember the "What's a computer?" ad? iPads are most definitely marketed as devices suitable to take the place of conventional computers.
> Not to mention it's a crime. Doesn't that heavily depend on where the employee is based? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirmative_action_in_the_Un... Quotas are legal in many states. Granted the author is likely…
Okay, let's see then I guess? I guess this HN submission was just a teaser as well then. Maybe another one will reveal something actually interesting.
Saying they have a quota doesn't mean "because you are white". I mean, it has a similar effect but it's not like we don't know quotas exist and are largely tolerated, are they not? Are quotas outright illegal in the US?…
So, where's the actual story? I don't use X so maybe it's buried somewhere else. Even the tweet you mentioned wasn't directly discoverable from the submission. But it looks like he already tweeted months ago that this…
Not even sure it's easy to find in Japan these days to be honest. The place I knew closed a few years back.
> I mean you mention anime characters, but there's a big greaser / rockabilly subculture in Japan. There isn't, though. There are probably a dozen or so in Tokyo and about the same number in Osaka. Granted, I don't have…
Facebook is being overrun with low effort memes and repetitive video content (literally being shown the same crap in regular intervals either reposted or from the same source). I make an effort to hide and block each…
> beware though, Wikipedia is bound to lead to errors by defining the monthly rate as yearly rate / 12 Looks like all the calculators do that as well. What's the right way?
Current capacity might not be referring to actual current point in time provisioned capacity but an estimate of how much the overall infra can handle over the next few days. No idea but ultimately this is marketing. If…
That cost basis inheritance thing is done in Japan actually, on top of inheritance tax, mind you.
Websites or apps backed by a sheet or some other minimalist setup are fairly common. What's noteworthy about the submission is that the website is a sheet, not a layer to render info from one.
If you think that an engineer is replaceable, why isn't the rest of the early employees? Or do you mean that only founders should get any equity? I'm not quite sure what your comparison does. If you build a company…
Thanks for that. Looks super useful. Probably more accessible than the theory (alone).
The ergonomics of checked exceptions may be debatable but compared to golangs explicit error handling at essentially each function call is definitely worse.
From the start I was wondering if there's no way for the JVM to solve this with less cruft on the bytecode level. Of course, that doesn't mean I was aware of the challenges, just an intuition. I do think they must have…
This is as usual not universal. First, in shops people clearly ask for whether they have something. It's super common for clothes and shoes stores to have more sizes in the back. I might ask the negative form when I…
On my last question: > Why would this happen if you used alternative currency payouts for that? Is it possible you hadn't yet registered your CAD bank account on your Stripe account before starting to accept CAD…