To me it seems like it's depicting a situation where the string hasn't been pulled fully, so some of its slack hasn't straightened out into the otherwise resulting triangle yet.
Is that true? It seems that our eyes are mechanically capable of looking in divergent directions, what's the reason that we're not able to "uncross" them beyond looking straight ahead?
(Edit: Anecdotally I can confirm for myself that I'm not able to do it, so wondering if there's anyone that can.)
To save others the click: Their issues were simply that Swift has no fast JSON impl, and in Rust, when using serde (most popular library handling JSON marshalling), it leads to binaries getting a bunch bigger. That's it. So yeah, same perspective -- unless either of the above matter in your case (in 90%+ of cases they don't), JSON is just fine from a perf perspective.
Not true, not sure why GP said that. Been writing Rust for many years and code does not just break on compiler upgrades. Super stable overall, including the wonderfully evolving ecosystem!
They just changed the assignments of what tapping the right stalk once vs twice does -- before, once brought you into cruise control and twice into autopilot. After the change, that order is reversed by default, but you can change that from the settings.
I think at some point the absurdity of the numbers (now it's 2M, soon it'll be 10M, 50M, ...) will become so great that NHTSA will stop calling this a "recall", and then this term will no longer be usable for clickbait article titles. Absurdity because it'll get harder and harder to imagine how a company might bring in millions and millions of vehicles in for service repeatedly, from a logistics and cost perspective, and still be able to grow and make a good profit.
You're not alone, I do that too sometimes! But I've also found that most people have a hard time doing or following along with something like that. Possibly because in the end it does require a whole lot of skill in using git, because you will usually want to rewrite history in some ways, and large numbers of developers are very uncomfortable with that.
minor nitpick: "e.V." in Germany is "eingetragener Verein", "registered association" and is a form of association that's extremely common and use for all kinds of things, e.g. local sports groups, interest groups, etc, so "e.V." in and of itself doesn't have anything to do with industry, though as in the above case it can be used that way!