You're confusing the two. Decriminalization needs nothing more than to be removed from the controlled substances list, and being removed from the criminal code. It's easy peasy, and could be done easily within a week. You don't need anything because it's no longer criminal, you just stop prosecuting them. Quick announcement to the feeds on the streets, and you're running.
Legalization on the other hand, which is what the current gov is going for, is legalization. And that requires all those special departments, policies, procedures, laws, etc...
Nah, we're not really worried about those treaties, we're going to send our little, "thank you, but we will no longer be complying with Section XXXXX, in YYYY)". Decriminalizing is simply taking it off the current schedule, and removing it from existing laws.
Legalization requires a whole framework of laws to be created. You could piggyback off cigarettes of alcohol, but should you? Those are the discussions that will be heard over the next sever months.
Technical people? Hell, even us blokes writing the software have no clue. I have 20 years in this, but guestamating costs and timelines? Nope. I'm a little better, but I mean, graduating from t-ball to little league.
The only time I hit it on the head, is when I'm doing a project, the type of which, I've done before. And I tend to avoid those.
Well, look at it this way, when creating a SPA, you're running everything in a single place. A single HTML page. In some instances, it makes sense to push the state to the query string, but often it doesn't, and more often still are the occasions developers haven't thought about it. So every time you hit the back button, and weren't where you thought you would be, that's the same issue. SPA frameworks's are getting better at that, but this still happens to me on the daily.
Awesome, though I'd love to see a line or two under the title with the show notes (if they have them embedded). For those not already knowing about the hilarious podcast, The title is precious little to go on.
Bluetooth didn't work like a damn for music when the Hi-Fi came out. Spec was only 3 years baked, and wasn't in anything, certainly not the iPods everyone had been buying at the time. We wouldn't see an iPod with bluetooth for another couple years.
Strangely, it seems the etiquette would be that a TL;DR at the beginning of a post suggests a summary of the article. TL;DR at the end summarizes your comment.
One word, birds. We hit them frequently, and a goose weighs a lot more than most drones. This is panicking over shark attacks while commuting in your car while smoking cigarettes. Sure we need to set limits, but most of this is FUD.
I moved out to a small town a couple years ago, and a large part of that was I had a large group of friends. I wasn't able to really engage in many of my side projects, and just needed more space. I'm close enough that I can hit the big events of the group, but people don't swing much when you're an hour and a half away from the city core. But I'm not very smart, so I wonder if we have a correlation here between location and people that take on self initiated projects? And smart people tend to be in a position of initiating projects on their own without direction. I can honestly say, I love living where I am, and couldn't be much happier.
This has less to do with hours worked and more to do with personality. I don't work more hours than everyone else because I want to tick some box, or that it's needed. I work harder and longer, because I have a vision and a passion. I'm stubborn, so I keep going because I know it can be done. So I take ownership of the key components, and I'll review everything else; everything. It's not needed at all. It's correlative, not causative.
Comments lie, frequently. The only time I need to look a comments is when someone has done a poor job of naming things. The comments may explain intent, but they do not explain what it's doing.
Never question someone's credibility because their preference differs from yours. It'll make people question your credibility.