And, yes - we're Capuling! Who is not against creeping authoritarianism and attempts to wipe out diversity?
I'm pretty tenacious and don't give up easily in general, which has led me to go down with several sinking ships (women and startups). I did realize I was involved in something special - the hard part was getting…
Here's my two cents (I got my Ph.D. in physics from U. Chicago): I went to grad school because 1) Chicago physics was famously challenging and I wanted the challenge, 2) Everyone else I knew went to grad school - I…
He says he might use a debugger depending on the type of application he's working with. Also, there's something to be said for extremely tight, minimalist, highly reusable code. It makes it easier to walk through it in…
My co-worker does the same thing. Thinks instead of opening the debugger. In fact, he never uses a debugger even though he's a hardcore low-level C/C++ guy. Another important thing is to have good logs. Don't log too…
And, yes - we're Capuling! Who is not against creeping authoritarianism and attempts to wipe out diversity?
I'm pretty tenacious and don't give up easily in general, which has led me to go down with several sinking ships (women and startups). I did realize I was involved in something special - the hard part was getting…
Here's my two cents (I got my Ph.D. in physics from U. Chicago): I went to grad school because 1) Chicago physics was famously challenging and I wanted the challenge, 2) Everyone else I knew went to grad school - I…
He says he might use a debugger depending on the type of application he's working with. Also, there's something to be said for extremely tight, minimalist, highly reusable code. It makes it easier to walk through it in…
My co-worker does the same thing. Thinks instead of opening the debugger. In fact, he never uses a debugger even though he's a hardcore low-level C/C++ guy. Another important thing is to have good logs. Don't log too…