Computer programming, regardless of language, is hard. The computer does exactly what you tell it to.
Computer programming, regardless of language, is hard. The computer does exactly what you tell it to.
So are they really mammals?
400 chargers. Wow!
The UK installed "388 slow, 756 fast, and 114 rapid and 236 ultra-rapid" chargers last month. Granted, that’s across all networks, but 400 shouldn’t be worthy of mention for a country the size of the US.
Federal regulators are conspicuously absent in stopping this live experimentation on public roads with live humans.
Why has this been allowed for so long?
That’s where I assumed it was going.
Unlikely. You probably will injest the poison and die, and depending on if the poison also acts as a venom they may / may not.
It’s probably more accurate to say "Venoms are injected. Poisons are injested. "
Is a Tuk-Tuk still a Tuk-Tuk when it doesn’t go Tuk-Tuk and just goes vrrshh?
How about “To learn it to that level will take 10,000 hours I don’t have”? Does that make more sense to you?
“learn Rust” in this case is learn it to a level where all of the little behaviour around cross language integrations are understood and security flaws won’t be introduced. Expert level.
It’s not “I did a pet project over the weekend”.
equivalent to one in every £3 spent.
Why not just say that ⅓ of money spent was on contracts that had red flags? That’s what they mean, but they’re trying to make it sound more damning and speaking nonsense.
Journalists and numbers is a bad mix.
On the topic of the actual story, I’m not surprised. When are we going to bring a case?
…and people worry about the name of a git branch.
I’m trying to understand Git, but it’s a giant conceptual leap.
To start with, start with just using git locally. Don’t worry about GitHub or similar. Then git and SVN will work very similarly. The main difference is that you need to git add
files with changes inside before you commit them.
Once you’re comfortable with using it by yourself, then I suggest running something like forgejo
locally to be your own code server. Then you can play and learn how the two parts work together.
Generally, you need to give yourself a little time. You need to do the work. Be efficient…sure, but don’t try to force it to be quicker than the time you need to learn.
Right, so you just have a single step and then hand over to a proper script. I’ve seen many people try to put much more complex logic in there before handing over to a proper language.
Config is fine, but Yamls biggest problem is people use it to describe programs. For example: playbooks. For example: CI steps.
If YAML wasn’t abused in this way it would have a lot less hate.
I don’t view free-use models as open-source. Open-source means I can rebuild it from scratch and I can’t because I don’t know what the training data is, or have access to it.
The scale is the difference and who is harmed.
Billion dollar company losing $100. Who cares?!
Billion dollar company stealing from all artists in the world. We care.
Points 2 and 3. Basically make restrictions on normal user accounts which are fine for humans but that will make bots swear and curse.
Unless you mean “what should the registration process be” I think API keys via a user account would do.
Sometimes your longest serving engineers can be your biggest anchor. Good engineers are (justifyably) highly opinionated about what can be done, but sometimes it turns into “what I do works, so all other ways are wrong”. At that point the best move for them might be to go learn how somebody else does it. Wish them well, and back a different horse.
Often the money if far more than the individual realises.
Depending on the country, there may be taxes or other benefits which rise to the same degree or more.
Members of the team or grade need to be paid amounts which are within some range so that everything is fair.
You may feel you’re worth more than the majority of others, but it’s rarely the truth.
A VP was brought in at the company I used to work for that claimed “I need to offer candidates substantial increases or else I won’t attract top talent”. He started hiring people at a significantly higher rate. (I left at this point) Soon, the other engineers found out and all hell broke loose. They demanded equal pay.
The company is currently in financial difficulties. The salary bill got too big. They’re now struggling to complete the projects underway because they’ve had to cut staff and the 40yo company is probably going to be swallowed up.
The standard library is where project go to die.