The common man doesn't care about 'natty' bodybuilders, they look pathetic compared to stars like The Rock or Arnie or Stallone or whoever else is the icon of manly manliness who may be roided to the gills or won the genetic lottery or (probably) both.
Bodybuilding is already a very niche thing that a lot of people don't even consider a sport in itself (should beauty contests be an olympic discipline too?).
Some crap on 'mindfulness' aka forgiving people and not holding grudges. Made me soft and a lot worse in interpersonal relationships. Now that I'm back to my angry self people are more willing to do what I want them to do.
Because that's what technology is about.
1) You make a machine that replaces a human's task
2) The human is now free to focus on other tasks that a machine can't replace
Nope, take a look at Japanese audiobook stores e.g. https://www.febe.jp/, they're chock-full of self-improvement garbage. In fact out of 5 new books that come out 3-4 are of the "Get People to Like You in 10 Simple Steps" type.
JS lets you easily implement bars that do reflect progress.
Turn on the animation => start an async action (e.g. a database call) => end the animation. An error occured? Show the error. Here, simple and informative to the user - and much better than raw html.
There is a huge deficit of intermediate-advanced Vue tutorials compared to React. There are like 30 advanced-level tutorials on Egghead on React and like, what 3-4 advanced Vue tutorials (Nuxt, Nuxt and using Angular-like decorators to write proper classes instead of the 'it just works' vanilla boilerplate)?
Learning the ropes of Vue is easy. It's a go-to framework of the Laravel crowd for this very reason - you don't need to know Javascript much if at all, just learn some basic syntax and you're good to go for some basic virtual DOM magic.
Can't agree. I've been a reader since high school and well into college. Subscribed for a few years after and eventually stopped.
It's a lot of "water" with 1-2 worthwhile articles per issue at best. It's also extremely biased in more ways than one, trying to please its target audience as much as they can as opposed to challenging their views (which good journalism is supposed to, else what's the point).