Hugh Howey and Jack McDevitt are a couple that come to mind that I don’t see on your list.
Hugh Howey and Jack McDevitt are a couple that come to mind that I don’t see on your list.
Esc Esc Esc :w!
I only watch what’s in my subscriptions. Now and then I’ll add something new to see if I like it or remove something I don’t enjoy.
Obviously I would be using XML if I was doing evil.
1-2 days is enough to learn the basics, but I doubt you’ll be as nearly as productive as with something you’ve been using for years. Keep in mind that new languages also mean new frameworks, etc, some which take years to actually master, but at least months to get a good handle on them.
Also, from my understanding, Rust is a bit of a paradigm shift.
Sure, but it’s a lot more work for you to get to a point where you can be an active contributor.
Something you shouldn’t have to do in order to use the internet.
There are browser plugins that let you change your user-agent request header to masquerade as another browser (e.g., Chrome).
If you were restricted to just 700MM words, what would you say?
Kijiji is pretty popular in Canada. Varagesale is another one I’ve seen.
I wish we would have popped into a better existence.
Nothing happens before c. 4000 AD anyway.
What are your biggest pet peeves as a color blind person? In software, I mean.
I think he could do an entire floor at this point.
Consumer just needs to write 4x as many unit tests to make up for lack static typing. Hopefully the library author has done the same or you probably shouldn’t use that library.
I see no problem with starlabs.systems/pages/starlite-specification which is accessible from the hard to miss drop down menu at the top.
I have no opinion on whether this is blogspam, but the UX on that page is terrible (on mobile at least). I need to click to expand every section (9 times). And to make it worse, expanding one section collapses the others.
When does Hondo get his own series?
Ya, nice revisionist history there.
Have a drink and relax.
Sounds pretty close to me! spider.dal.net was my go-to server.
I installed Red Hat 5 circa 98-99 when we got a new computer - so I didn’t have to worry about destroying the existing Windows installation!
If you’d like to learn how, I recommend the book (which is also available online) Crafting Interpreters.