Just one of the many side effects of building on top of mongodb. :)
To me that is sensible in that a strongly opinionated framework is conducive to hiring temporary talent into. Not to disagree with your conclusion just that it seems likely to bias in favor of ruby and rails.
Of course, that part of Texas wouldn't have any freezing either, especially in the ground.
When I was doing this in grad school in 2009, we were pulling down to 10 angstroms in our best 3d reconstructions, sampling something around 30k virus particles (which I and some undergrads got to pick from the…
I can't even read this because of the leading space tripping up my eyes!
Not sure if this fits your needs, but I've really liked pgweb. https://github.com/sosedoff/pgweb GitHub - sosedoff/pgweb: Cross-platform client for PostgreSQL ...
I'd like to remind you that the process we are discussing is currently responsible for 1% of the world's energy consumption annually. That's clearly a "net-negative" cost. Feel free to review the Haber-Bosch process to…
Of course it is energy net negative. There is an energy cost to reducing nitrogen to ammonia. Enzymes aren't magic and nothing changes the energy cost equation of the products vs the reagants.
Just one of the many side effects of building on top of mongodb. :)
To me that is sensible in that a strongly opinionated framework is conducive to hiring temporary talent into. Not to disagree with your conclusion just that it seems likely to bias in favor of ruby and rails.
Of course, that part of Texas wouldn't have any freezing either, especially in the ground.
When I was doing this in grad school in 2009, we were pulling down to 10 angstroms in our best 3d reconstructions, sampling something around 30k virus particles (which I and some undergrads got to pick from the…
I can't even read this because of the leading space tripping up my eyes!
Not sure if this fits your needs, but I've really liked pgweb. https://github.com/sosedoff/pgweb GitHub - sosedoff/pgweb: Cross-platform client for PostgreSQL ...
I'd like to remind you that the process we are discussing is currently responsible for 1% of the world's energy consumption annually. That's clearly a "net-negative" cost. Feel free to review the Haber-Bosch process to…
Of course it is energy net negative. There is an energy cost to reducing nitrogen to ammonia. Enzymes aren't magic and nothing changes the energy cost equation of the products vs the reagants.