my model goes to a different school
Respectfully, the documentation makes it clear that the author is incorrect.
And gRPC with reflection, yeah?
[flagged]
> certainly not how one would want sexual interaction speak for yourself
A distinction that is unfortunately as important as it is meaningless
As a former engineering manager: no, I don't want to have a discussion about the hypothetical emoji. I want the engineer to put a rocketship in their commit message to have a slightly brighter day, and I want to…
> All those small discussions were essentially pointless Were they pointless, or were they positive feedback about a thing you personally disliked?
Only a dozen but same. Just ship the shit. Quality never mattered.
I'm sorry, but to my layman's eye this doesn't appear to be a proof. This feels like a disconnected series of assertions more than anything else.
May I ask how?
duckDB is one of the built-ins for count.co, which i've come to love
I feel like this starts with an agreeable premise. Some fraud is egregious, costly, and/or easy to detect. These low-hanging or high-impact cases are most worth pursuing. At some point you reach diminishing returns,…
This is awesome, I had no idea you could do this. And with gRPC built right in!
I've been using and loving this: https://github.com/yuliskov/SmartTubeNext
interesting read, thanks for sharing this
More accurately: the web survived Windows
I'm not quite sure how to phrase this, but here goes: during this procedure did you experience anything that you feel you could not have experienced absent someone physically poking your brain?
I personally pictured something similar to the dough hook attachment on my stand mixer
[citation needed]
This usage of "ask" is quite old, and as is often the case, everything old becomes new again: https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/111597/the-ask-i...
it's a weak argument until you start getting pull requests, emails, passive-aggressive reddit posts, etc. etc. etc
I don't know enough about Kotlin to know if it's useful or not to point out Kotlin/Native: https://kotlinlang.org/docs/native-overview.html
I'm just here to make a joke about python dependency management.
The study is a bit more interesting than this title suggests. >An intervention aimed to discourage participants from choosing the cheating-enabling environment based on social norm information did not have the expected…
my model goes to a different school
Respectfully, the documentation makes it clear that the author is incorrect.
And gRPC with reflection, yeah?
[flagged]
> certainly not how one would want sexual interaction speak for yourself
A distinction that is unfortunately as important as it is meaningless
As a former engineering manager: no, I don't want to have a discussion about the hypothetical emoji. I want the engineer to put a rocketship in their commit message to have a slightly brighter day, and I want to…
> All those small discussions were essentially pointless Were they pointless, or were they positive feedback about a thing you personally disliked?
Only a dozen but same. Just ship the shit. Quality never mattered.
I'm sorry, but to my layman's eye this doesn't appear to be a proof. This feels like a disconnected series of assertions more than anything else.
May I ask how?
duckDB is one of the built-ins for count.co, which i've come to love
I feel like this starts with an agreeable premise. Some fraud is egregious, costly, and/or easy to detect. These low-hanging or high-impact cases are most worth pursuing. At some point you reach diminishing returns,…
This is awesome, I had no idea you could do this. And with gRPC built right in!
I've been using and loving this: https://github.com/yuliskov/SmartTubeNext
interesting read, thanks for sharing this
More accurately: the web survived Windows
I'm not quite sure how to phrase this, but here goes: during this procedure did you experience anything that you feel you could not have experienced absent someone physically poking your brain?
I personally pictured something similar to the dough hook attachment on my stand mixer
[citation needed]
This usage of "ask" is quite old, and as is often the case, everything old becomes new again: https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/111597/the-ask-i...
it's a weak argument until you start getting pull requests, emails, passive-aggressive reddit posts, etc. etc. etc
I don't know enough about Kotlin to know if it's useful or not to point out Kotlin/Native: https://kotlinlang.org/docs/native-overview.html
I'm just here to make a joke about python dependency management.
The study is a bit more interesting than this title suggests. >An intervention aimed to discourage participants from choosing the cheating-enabling environment based on social norm information did not have the expected…