Yeah, I’ve wondered about that. Apparently it works for her, but… everybody’s different.
I actually know a number of people with CIs, but everyone else is at ASL club, so we’re not doing a lot of speaking. I’ll have to ask folks what they’ve tried, if only for my own curiosity.
Have you tried the non-over-the-ear cochlear devices? The kind that have everything built into the part that sticks magnetically to your implant — I don’t know what the term is; I don’t use them myself.
I know somebody who really dislikes the over-the-ear type devices and swears by the all-in-one kind.
She seems to get a full day of battery out of hers, but I don’t know what kind they are and I imagine usage patterns make a big difference.
I’ve been surprised how infrequently I need to explain this — definitely fewer than 10 times in the last 20 years of doing some variation if this consistently.
I keep expecting to have to explain, but the vast majority of the time people don’t ask.
If you’ve built once using the standard go module functionality then you will be able to rebuild as long as you don’t pull in more dependencies. Naturally you can move the cache around.
> Check out your code into some random directory. Copy the directory to a USB drive and walk it over to an air gapped machine (no wi-fi, no ethernet, clean dev environment installed). Copy the directory to the box, make some small code change and try to build your binary.
I don’t follow. Why is the code change important?
Why not just use the go module cache? Seems like a much cleaner solution with very little overhead.
I don't remember seeing any attended laundromats when I lived in SF in 2013. I was in the Nob Hill area.
Somebody did come by to close them, and there was generally a number you could call if a machine ate your quarters.
When I moved to Portland I was impressed by all the apartments with in-building washers. I quickly realized they were a necessity here since there are very few laundromats.
I have no personal experience with Mira; I’ve been looking for a respirator myself because I live in Portland.