Sadly, this is not true. I live in the bay area and most startups here, need you in person for their day of interviews. The industry standard seems to be 1 soft skill/ HR discussion + 1 technical phone screen + 1 day of…
I use AT&T too. It was spotty but much better yesterday. I suppose it just needed some combination of reboot/toggle to work again.
I updated to iOS 12(on an iPhone SE) yesterday and my WiFi calling feature went to hell. Needed two/three reboots and toggling WiFi calling for it to work again. Still seems flaky and I'm heavily dependent on it to work…
[This](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/double-solitu...) piece for The New Yorker is one of my favorites from him.
I am the exact same! Also, if it is some mindless donkey work that is pulling out modules from certain places and refactoring it just so as to fit with a new pattern, I procrastinate, waste time on the internet and…
I find virtualenv much easier to manage and use than docker. Unless you're changing dependencies and versions multiple times over a day, it's not a pain.
How economically feasible is it to automate assembly? It looks like a lot of human suffering can be lessened if at least some parts of assembly are automated.
I am almost tempted to bring it into work and frighten my manager with it :)
Sadly, this is not true. I live in the bay area and most startups here, need you in person for their day of interviews. The industry standard seems to be 1 soft skill/ HR discussion + 1 technical phone screen + 1 day of…
I use AT&T too. It was spotty but much better yesterday. I suppose it just needed some combination of reboot/toggle to work again.
I updated to iOS 12(on an iPhone SE) yesterday and my WiFi calling feature went to hell. Needed two/three reboots and toggling WiFi calling for it to work again. Still seems flaky and I'm heavily dependent on it to work…
[This](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/double-solitu...) piece for The New Yorker is one of my favorites from him.
I am the exact same! Also, if it is some mindless donkey work that is pulling out modules from certain places and refactoring it just so as to fit with a new pattern, I procrastinate, waste time on the internet and…
I find virtualenv much easier to manage and use than docker. Unless you're changing dependencies and versions multiple times over a day, it's not a pain.
How economically feasible is it to automate assembly? It looks like a lot of human suffering can be lessened if at least some parts of assembly are automated.
I am almost tempted to bring it into work and frighten my manager with it :)