> You're moving the goalpost on this. For me, as someone else stated, the separation between home life and work life is a bit easier with a commute. The point is that separation from home and work life does not require…
> Government regulation is different because it forces everyone (...) It really isn't. It just stops unscrupulous employers from abusing their employees. There are already plenty of tech companies that went full remote,…
> Ex (multi) FAANG engineer here. I personally agree that a 30 minute commute home is more effective for separating work and home than just the clock. The data published (by MSFT) shows employees are working more hours…
> If there are cons to the employer, that means I'm worth less and can demand less salary (...) During the industrial revolution, some employers saw that there were significant pros in employing children and working…
> why am I getting heavily down voted for discussing personal reasons why I enjoyed working in the office? My guess is that there has been chatter on how discussions on WFO, specially in tech forums, are brigaded by…
> Ditto. I’ve been doing a lot of managery stuff during the pandemic and the main things I miss are the water cooler talk that greased a lot of wheels and filled in a lot of gaps (...) I'm sure mileages vary, but…
From the article's summary: > The central sticking point, and cause cited by many people who recently left, was Smith’s strong push this year for all Blue Origin employees to return to the office. This is without a…
> Every time you commit, package-lock.json is different. And when it is not, then I have 26 new vulnerabilities to be fixed by “npm audit fix”. I have zero trust in my build being reproducible, or even working one year…
> Differentiating DLL and SO hell is getting a bit beyond pedantic (...) It really isn't. Unlike linking problems, where the problem is focused on how you need to fight your dependencies to be able to resolve symbols,…
DLL Hell ceased to be a practical concern over a decade ago, particularly given that Windows provides tight control over its dynamic linking search order. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/dlls/dynamic-...…
I'm afraid that this is one of the expected outcomes of lowering and even outright eliminating preventative measures, such as mask mandates and social distancing, and placing all the chips on the current generation of…
> End user of a linker? I'd argue that if you're not packaging your software or testing your software's dependencies, either you're doing something extremely exotic that lies far outside anyone's happy path or "dylib…
> But that sleight-of-hand hides the fact that many (perhaps even most) security fixes do not break the ABI or API; they are completely contained to the implementation (one obvious exception would be if the security…
> I think the issue comes when results are reported and consumers try to use those results to determine which behaviors are risky. Well, consumers are doing it completely wrong if they're looking up to papers as…
> to be fair though, it can be a hassle to get something on wikipedia - writing a well thought out addition to a page, only to have it immediately reversed out can be disheartening. It indeed can take work, but that's…
> Unfortunately deletionists have won, at least in my limited experience, and Wikipedia subjectively feels now to be largely a kingdom of those who find it more satisfying/easier to delete information than to create.…
> Went hunting for relevant pages, and it's surprising how weak Wikipedia is on this entire subject. That's how Wikipedia works: people like you and me search for a topic, and if something is missing then it's up to us…
> And my grandfather used to say the longer you look at something the easier it gets to compress all the information of a complex world into a few dots. Basically these artists brains were running highly optimized…
> (...) what makes you think that a company with rapidly outdating chip designs and access only to domestic silicon fabs (...) Well, maybe the fact that not so long ago it had none of that and it clearly looks like both…
> If ARM china "steals" ARM ip, ARM is still capable of licensing to it's western clients; If the smartphone market is an indicator, too bad that this will just mean that the majority of OEMs will just buy their chips…
> I don't know whether this is a truly serious paper or can be filed under "Spurious Correlations"[0] I don't understand what leads you to believe that a paper that can be filed under "spurious correlation" could be…
> can you name the sustainable sources of hydrogen, and their efficiency? Hydrogen is an energy store. It doesn't typically exist by itself in nature and must be produced. Thus the answer for your question is any and…
> I don't want to live in a region where my neighbors just watch me get robbed... What do you expect a neighbor to do regarding a violent gang that blows up a door, takes 5min to do its thing, and proceeds to vanish in…
> The result? No response. No company cared what skills I have gained during my studies. They see courses like hardware security as non-practical and a course on multithreading as mostly theoretical. I wouldn't take…
> QML spoiled me, as React in comparison is quite clunky, so I'm not really sure where your post is coming from. My post comes from my personal and professional experience developing Qt applications with C++, which…
> You're moving the goalpost on this. For me, as someone else stated, the separation between home life and work life is a bit easier with a commute. The point is that separation from home and work life does not require…
> Government regulation is different because it forces everyone (...) It really isn't. It just stops unscrupulous employers from abusing their employees. There are already plenty of tech companies that went full remote,…
> Ex (multi) FAANG engineer here. I personally agree that a 30 minute commute home is more effective for separating work and home than just the clock. The data published (by MSFT) shows employees are working more hours…
> If there are cons to the employer, that means I'm worth less and can demand less salary (...) During the industrial revolution, some employers saw that there were significant pros in employing children and working…
> why am I getting heavily down voted for discussing personal reasons why I enjoyed working in the office? My guess is that there has been chatter on how discussions on WFO, specially in tech forums, are brigaded by…
> Ditto. I’ve been doing a lot of managery stuff during the pandemic and the main things I miss are the water cooler talk that greased a lot of wheels and filled in a lot of gaps (...) I'm sure mileages vary, but…
From the article's summary: > The central sticking point, and cause cited by many people who recently left, was Smith’s strong push this year for all Blue Origin employees to return to the office. This is without a…
> Every time you commit, package-lock.json is different. And when it is not, then I have 26 new vulnerabilities to be fixed by “npm audit fix”. I have zero trust in my build being reproducible, or even working one year…
> Differentiating DLL and SO hell is getting a bit beyond pedantic (...) It really isn't. Unlike linking problems, where the problem is focused on how you need to fight your dependencies to be able to resolve symbols,…
DLL Hell ceased to be a practical concern over a decade ago, particularly given that Windows provides tight control over its dynamic linking search order. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/dlls/dynamic-...…
I'm afraid that this is one of the expected outcomes of lowering and even outright eliminating preventative measures, such as mask mandates and social distancing, and placing all the chips on the current generation of…
> End user of a linker? I'd argue that if you're not packaging your software or testing your software's dependencies, either you're doing something extremely exotic that lies far outside anyone's happy path or "dylib…
> But that sleight-of-hand hides the fact that many (perhaps even most) security fixes do not break the ABI or API; they are completely contained to the implementation (one obvious exception would be if the security…
> I think the issue comes when results are reported and consumers try to use those results to determine which behaviors are risky. Well, consumers are doing it completely wrong if they're looking up to papers as…
> to be fair though, it can be a hassle to get something on wikipedia - writing a well thought out addition to a page, only to have it immediately reversed out can be disheartening. It indeed can take work, but that's…
> Unfortunately deletionists have won, at least in my limited experience, and Wikipedia subjectively feels now to be largely a kingdom of those who find it more satisfying/easier to delete information than to create.…
> Went hunting for relevant pages, and it's surprising how weak Wikipedia is on this entire subject. That's how Wikipedia works: people like you and me search for a topic, and if something is missing then it's up to us…
> And my grandfather used to say the longer you look at something the easier it gets to compress all the information of a complex world into a few dots. Basically these artists brains were running highly optimized…
> (...) what makes you think that a company with rapidly outdating chip designs and access only to domestic silicon fabs (...) Well, maybe the fact that not so long ago it had none of that and it clearly looks like both…
> If ARM china "steals" ARM ip, ARM is still capable of licensing to it's western clients; If the smartphone market is an indicator, too bad that this will just mean that the majority of OEMs will just buy their chips…
> I don't know whether this is a truly serious paper or can be filed under "Spurious Correlations"[0] I don't understand what leads you to believe that a paper that can be filed under "spurious correlation" could be…
> can you name the sustainable sources of hydrogen, and their efficiency? Hydrogen is an energy store. It doesn't typically exist by itself in nature and must be produced. Thus the answer for your question is any and…
> I don't want to live in a region where my neighbors just watch me get robbed... What do you expect a neighbor to do regarding a violent gang that blows up a door, takes 5min to do its thing, and proceeds to vanish in…
> The result? No response. No company cared what skills I have gained during my studies. They see courses like hardware security as non-practical and a course on multithreading as mostly theoretical. I wouldn't take…
> QML spoiled me, as React in comparison is quite clunky, so I'm not really sure where your post is coming from. My post comes from my personal and professional experience developing Qt applications with C++, which…