So you're saying that the splitters are split into two groups? One group which knows when it's a good time to split, and the other group which doesn't?,
Financial security is the reason - if people don't have financial security, they'll expect their children to care for them in their old age when they're unable to earn.
That's the case in most (all?) immigrants cultures - children are expected to, and do, take care of their parents in their old age (exceptions are always there ofc).
After families are established and have financial security, they no longer need to rely on their children in their old age - at which point it becomes a choice.
Perhaps -
1) The people in the richer society are exposed to more ideas and options than the people in poorer societies, which makes them evaluate having/not having children vs "have them because everyone does it"
2) The people in richer societies have a social security net/wealth to fall back on in their old age, whereas the poorer societies are always "hand to mouth" without having the luxury of any retirement savings - all their time and energy goes just for basic survival - and they need children to support them in their old age.
Personally, I'm planning to learn about the internal implementation of databas(es), starting with the book Designing Data Intensive Applications.
This is so that I learn about the current ways data is stored
I cope by reminding myself that I shouldn't compare my personal knowledge with the combined knowledge of a community - multiple people here are knowledgeable about and post about different areas
FWIW, this is exactly what it's like for me too - "Not enough stimulation and I get distracted easily, too much stimulation and I shut down completely."
Stack trace usually means a full stack trace. I've rarely seen one in production - it's usually for unhandled errors.
Usually it'll be a one line log which will point you to the point in code where it's erroring out.
Sounds like you just want the logs for the [microservice] for a particular failing request, and not the stack trace?
I think it's an apt analogy.
If the store manager has never seen you before, the store manager would not know who you are at all unless you introduce yourself.
The only thing they would learn about you would be characteristics like height/weight/voice/tattoos etc - your IP address - and could use it to correlate you if seeing you in the future
We recently got Liraglutide for a family member and it's worked wonders. (It's an alternative to semaglutide, and only available as an injection). They've lost weight for the first time at age 64, mostly because they just don't feel hungry all the time anymore. They're super happy to see the stretch marks on their belly.
It costs around INR 12,500/month though for a total of 3 injections, after a 20% discount, which is super expensive. (For comparison, a strip of 15 tablets of Hydroxychloroquine costs INR 110, and all their other medicines for diabetes, hypertension, depression, insulin etc cost INR 6000/month combined). And insurance doesn't cover any medication here unless it's 30-60 days pre/post hospitalization.
There's quite a few VPNs who have been asked to keep logs by the authorities but the VPN providers contest it in court, and since their jurisdiction laws don't need them to, the courts side with the VPN providers.
Mullad, OVPN are a couple.
What are your opinions on those?
Not every country has laws like USA/India, which give the government free reign by citing certain Acts.
Two things -
First - I learn how the data flows from the source to the end. That teaches me to navigate the codebase entirely. (User action to database, or source data to end data etc.
Second - I learn how different components are wired together.
I have a massive tab problem, and had to build a personal SOP to manage it.
I have 400+ tabs open on Chrome right now, on my mobile.
Every now and then, I use chrome on my laptop to open all tabs from my mobile (tabs from other devices show in History), save them to one tab (browser extension), and save it as a HTML, and close all tabs on my mobile.
It doesn't take more than a week to build up to more than 100 again.
I believe my record has been 1100+ tabs on Chrome, and 5000+ tabs on Opera Mobile.
The desktop version of these apps can't handle these amounts nearly as well..
I find it varies a lot from day to day and time to time. It probably has to do with a combination of sleep, food, type of contexts and tasks I'm working in, distractions (active and passive/background), and probably other factors.
I've considered and tried to optimize it so that I'm working clos to the peak, but then decided that'd be too much effort and too restrictive, and instead try different things (music, isolation, gaining context, writing/thinking, approaching the work in different ways etc) when I feel I'm not working well