Call me old-fashioned and a bad person, but I keep thinking that "letting your shit catch on fire or get stolen" is a bad thing, so mark me down as "risk management".
(ed. - removed a naughty "not")
Call me old-fashioned and a bad person, but I keep thinking that "letting your shit catch on fire or get stolen" is a bad thing, so mark me down as "risk management".
(ed. - removed a naughty "not")
Those were the disposable ones that will sink far enough into the mud to become heliports next year.
Gonna go with "They bought tickets and drove in?"
Huge +1.
Kinda surprised that the big chains like Love's haven't started building those out yet.
Yeah, totally understand. FWIW, I'm surprised there's not a better, more standardized way to charge (e.g. automated connections, or "skid connectors") to deal with this. Induction has it's own set of problems, but it would be better than cable wrangling.
Making it easier for her would also make it easier for others, and might even reduce costs, but I have no real idea about a lot of this.
I dunno.
The problem with the EV cables is that they're so light that they get horribly abused. This, at least, can deal with a lot more damage. I mean, it's about as thick as a fuel pump hose, so there's precedent.
Oh, god, thank you.
Sorry, but after reading all these takes about how folk need to eat their freezers and lash down their pets, someone finally understands the threat is flooding and debris flows.
Particularly in the areas this storm is going to be in. The parts that recently had a massive fire so all the chaparral waxed the ground.
Had an interesting conversation yesterday with someone that reminded me how weird Corporate and Open Source development is.
He asked what sort of qualifications and degrees are required to work on the rust compiler.
I told him: "Well, none. You could grab a ticket and create a PR. Now, getting that PR landed means it's going to be super scrutinized."
There are PhDs with dozens of AWS certs relying on code written by college drop-outs.
It's a really, really weird world.
I still hold that Firefox Multi-containers are like a hidden superpower.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/multi-account-containers/
Really useful when you want to group and sandbox sites, self organize tabs, and all sorts of other fun things.
Really wish more folk knew about that feature.
Start ‘em early?
I'm sure a bit of tack welding will fix that right up.
One small difference. The full ActivityPub protocol is published and anyone can implement it.
AT is still not fully published, so it's still a closed network for the moment.
I hope that AT does indeed get fully published, but for now, it's proprietary.
A lot have no idea they do that, either.
There's a whole emerging field of study about how many of our decisions are driven by communal factors more than purely objective ones.
Really highlights the importance of belonging to a community that aligns with what you understand to be "good".
Velcro
Totally. When I say "boilerplate" I mean the sort of general skeleton code that you'd find in a cookbook. (e.g. I need a rust app that uses Cadence for metrics, Actix for web handling and Slog for logging. Basically this: https://github.com/mozilla-services/skeleton )
I'd still review the hell out of it, but at least it's better than digging through manuals for stuff you forgot last time.
Someone pointed out that they basically used an LLM to build the boilerplate code for a project they wanted.
I'll admit that's a reasonable thing since it's literally automating some boring parts and gets you past that blank page hurdle.
Could you swap that LLM for a cookbook? Sure. It just saved you from looking through it.
What I love about arguments like these is that the person making them:
1) feels that they're not part of the 10% loss
2) believes that they or someone they know will have some control over the loss.
You realize that someone in Cupertino would then realize they could expand into more family dining options and roll out the Apple Bee.
So, what you’re saying is that Apple needs to introduce the iHop.
Important note:
Have more loyalty to the people you work with, than the company you work for.
Your network can help you get a job.
Your company can give you a 3 month COBRA package.
Got two Turing tables and some microcode.I work on back-end server-y type stuff at a place that keeps rockin' the free web. I like rust, python, and horrible puns (not necessarily in that order).I tend to be nice for selfish reasons (I don't like hanging out with jerks).#programming #rust #python#mentoring #DadJokes #fedi22 #searchable
GNU social JP is a social network, courtesy of GNU social JP管理人. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.2-dev, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.
All GNU social JP content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.