You could have been helpful and chose to be an asshole instead. Go back and think about what you did.
You could have been helpful and chose to be an asshole instead. Go back and think about what you did.
This is my understanding as well, but also not an expert.
I agree with this. When I publish my code, it is documented for someone in my field with around my level of knowledge. I assume you know DNS, I assume you know what a vector is, I assume you know what a dht is, I assume you know what O(log n) is.
I’m not writing a CS50 course, I’m helping you use the code I wrote.
Might be different for software like libre office which is supposed to be used by anyone, but most software on earth is built with other developers in mind.
Humanities are very important. Robots are not yet capable of flipping burgers!
Yes officer, this comment right here.
Support for weird stuff like integration with smart home (home assistant), better syntax highlighting / autocomplete for specific cases (like the home assistant mentioned above), better support for mixed fonts, database integration, more efficient use of screen real estate for side panels and less effort to add new languages in general (cdk, terraform, k8s with crd, go, etc), one click github copilot…
My current role needs me to deal with whatever the customer is using, so a whole lot of variability, custom resources and libraries, languages that I’m not super familiar with… It’s just easier.
If it helps, I’m still running Arch, BTW. (but probably will go with just debian when my computer dies, whenever that will be).
If I were writing code 40h a week maybe, but my emacs brain can’t get used to vim motions.
That’s what I meant by “kind of” open source.
I’m open for suggestions for a better one, but for me it uniquely combines open source (kind of) with ease of use and functionality / expandability. I used emacs for more than a decade and switched to VSCode (although I don’t do coding as my primary activity anymore). Tried neovim, sublime, netbeans and webstorm and didn’t convince me.
Because some are good. VSCode for instance.
That’s what happens when the victim is an accomplice…
Thankfully all printers are frustration free now.
Meh, nothing a VPN and a 3 bucks a month VPS can’t solve…
yells at cloud in IPv4
If the government allows it, they are per definition not “legally Grey”.
My dude, IKEA has an in-house AI model. Every insurance company has one. Subway (the sandwich shop) has one.
Saying that the NSA “supposedly” has an AI model that can search through data is like saying they “maybe” have a coffee machine.
Spain has land borders with 3 non-EU countries…
Or stay on Windows 10, if the pattern holds true Windows 12 might be decent again.
You are right, that is impossible, but it isn’t what they are doing.
They are turning it back on either manually or by some other method (cell tower for instance). This automation seems to be to just turn it off.