News websites blow my mind with this - if I forked over $5 to every news outlet I occasionally like to read, I'd be spending at least $500 maybe more per year JUST to get access to some random person's biased recant of what's happening in the world. If there were a news source that did the opposite of this, and basically provided a bullet list of objective, non-biased events boiled down to exactly what I need to know, that might be something I'd pay for. Hell, it would save you time over filtering the opinionated BS out.
> It stings having to pay an extra $15k / yr, but for our kids learning and mental health I'd happily pay double.
Austinite here w/family in Dallas. Dallas is unusual compared to Austin/Houston in that nearly anyone coming from a wealthy family living in Dallas proper goes to private schools. I'm not from Dallas but have friends who attended Hockaday, Ursuline, Jesuit, and BL. I always thought it was really odd how many of them went to private school versus my Houston-area friends, who nearly all attended public schools in the suburbs, or one of the better inner-city public schools like Memorial or Lamar. Don't know as much about Austin but from what I hear the public schools here are pretty great too.
I haven't read the document but what's wrong with the term "human"? Is there some other intelligent life-form on this planet contributing to technology and software today that I'm unaware of?
Picking on the word human just seems nit-picky, like someone's not woke enough to use a more inclusive term.
I also have an APC Back-UPS. Mine are the Back-UPS 650 model, I have two of them. Both emit an annoying LOUD high-frequency capacitor whirring noise that is audible to my ears even when the loud AC intake fan is blowing in the same room. I'm actually shocked any company would ship a product in this condition, unless all their customers have hearing problems. It's a power strip... it's supposed to be silent. Not like a computer.
If my batteries die, I'll just replace them with non-battery backup strips. Not worth the trouble for me living in a city where power goes out maybe once per year on average for 10 minutes, and I don't have servers that need to stay online anymore.
The points you make are fine but I think the experience becomes more painful linearly with the number of servers you manage, since you're N times more likely to see something happen that takes down a server. It just happens more frequently. At some point that becomes often enough that you don't want to deal with it anymore.
Wow, that is an interesting fact... thanks. I've never heard this before, and I don't think it's common knowledge among non-Mormons like myself. Interesting stuff...
Probably not but for certain use-cases Intel is just way easier and less trouble (building a Hackintosh with Thunderbolt 3 connections for a UA audio interface, for one). And yeah, not everyone has such special needs but some of us do even though we may have one or multiple "real" Macs at home.
In this case, many of the features appear to be improvements upon features originally introduced in Garageband iOS, so the features are trickling backwards consumer -> pro.
Python is great, but I think the answer to "develop a web app as quickly as possible" is just going to be whatever the developer has been using and is comfortable with.
A .NET developer might be able to throw up a webapp quicker with .NET tooling instead of picking up Python & Django (or PHP & Laravel), for example.
Installing something is easy, learning how to write Elixir/Phoenix/maybe Erlang is the hard part.
Don't ever let "installation" prevent you from trying something, on Mac it's literally "brew install elixir" followed by a command to install phoenix framework.
> Its the guy that always reaches for the menu bar instead of learning keyboard shortcuts
I think judging someone based on their computer habits like being a command-line guy versus a GUI guy might be a risky thing. I'm a command-line guy through and through, but my newest boss comes from a different background and is very GUI-focused, and I think it would be easy to assume he's mediocre based on his choice of tools and such, but the results are more what matters.
That said, he seems like a pretty stubborn guy and I've definitely seen some warning signs on being resistant to change.
Hmm I do have ADHD but your first statement "learn the technique, not to finish" definitely could apply to me both in technical (software engineering and coding) areas of my life as well as artistic (music, recording, mixing, etc.).
Kurzarbeit is described on Google as "Short-time working or short time is a situation or system in which civilian employees agree to or are forced to accept a reduction in working time and pay.".
That's different than a layoff. I'd happily accept a reduction in pay and work hours over a 100% pay cut and temporary layoff, if that's what it took to keep my company alive during
a temporary economic downturn.
It's hard enough to save money as it is.
News websites blow my mind with this - if I forked over $5 to every news outlet I occasionally like to read, I'd be spending at least $500 maybe more per year JUST to get access to some random person's biased recant of what's happening in the world. If there were a news source that did the opposite of this, and basically provided a bullet list of objective, non-biased events boiled down to exactly what I need to know, that might be something I'd pay for. Hell, it would save you time over filtering the opinionated BS out.