Im sure you get ideas that are below your threshold for engagement... most people do until someone makes them aware and they have an “aha” moment..
Pick a topic, product, food, restaurant, etc. at random and think of (then write down) at least one way to improve it (even if subjective).
Now for each propose at least one method of doing it. If you don’t know how, then take a minute to google the processes that lead up to the improvement... slowly you internalize that knowledge and it becomes second nature.
It’s an exercise, but after a week or two you will come to do it naturally. Just make sure you tell people your ideas if your not going to use them.
I’ve found that when you “release” an idea, better ones follow.
Why am I not surprised that super-liberal Slate says my right to privacy should be overlooked because some idiot with an iphone wants to record every conversation?
Pervasiveness-of-technology should not ever be a reason to obviate the rights of the individual.
Most likely, one of your competitors negotiated a deal where you were deplatformed as a condition. $57M over 13/14 years, or $100M right now... easy choice for Facebook.
Why didn’t he use a binary protocol to convey his disdain for text protocols? Simply because nobody would understand it, which is the entire idea behind text protocols... and language.
That depends on your personal health. 50% deadlier to someone with existing issues that make the more likely to have a bad outcome (death) is worse than 50% more transmissible. The former cannot be managed, but the latter can by isolation or other means.
Not to say 50% more transmissible isn’t also bad, but not the worst, for them at least.
while i agree this is overly complex given the simplicity of virtualenvs, there is something “pythonic” about encapsulating the environment in a container.
I would suggest using alpine containers with python for a ~40mB container, versus the ~900MB container created here to run a server.
For me, python containers are only used when I want to bundle things into services on swarm, and I use venvs for local development.
imho, front end first, then back-end, to be a well-rounded developer. Backend is so deep and so consuming, that knowing how what you do in UX will affect users on the front end is a valuable skill.
Tesla’s not worried... The apple car will cost $300k, only take you to “approved” or licensed destinations, and be replaced in 6 months with newer, “better” model with cooler features.
Why anyone would buy new Apple products, arguably the most expensive products in any category, when they support these types of manufacturing slave-labor situations, is beyond me.
Funny how you never hear about this type of situation with any other tech brand.
The article wasn’t clear that doppler shift was accounted for, so a statement of fact that the signal was what it was can’t be made until doppler shift is accurately accounted for over time.
Higher over time means it’s moving toward, lower over time means moving away.
After review: looks like it’s not been doppler adjusted... “And second, the signal “drifts,” meaning that it appears to be changing very slightly in frequency—an effect that could be due to the motion of our planet, or of a moving extraterrestrial source such as a transmitter on the surface of one of Proxima Centauri’s worlds. “
You mean, invasive as in humans?
Invasive species are by nature Alpha, to the indigenous Beta. They don’t earn the right to stay, they take it, and it’s the indigenous Betas that must earn the right to stay once invaded if they aren’t killed in the fight, and they tend to end up subservient to the invaders.
Non-territorial species are by definition nomadic and Beta as they get pushed out by Alpha invaders.
This is different from the macaques as they are an occupying species and usually non-aggressive. Mammalian occupation due to population growth is not the same as being invasive.
I personally find coding to be a mental exercise that, at least for me, allows me to time travel. If I am engaged in the design of an algorithm, or set thereof, time passes very very quickly and my perception of it is non existent.
I have gone for 12 hours without even noticing any time passage, much to the chagrin of my wife and ride-home-needing-daughter.
Side effects? Since it’s meditation for me, it’s a relaxing retreat without any visible (at least to me) issues.. I guess I don’t see how long bouts of concentration can be damaging to the psyche.
I’ve also noticed that if I narrate my development (as if recording a tutorial) that a I am unable to achieve time travel. Been doing it for 40 years... yikes..
I’ve had code stolen by an employee who used it to start a competing service. I sued him in Federal court and won.
You didn’t have your code stolen.
Your code was free and open, and the header he removed stated that fact.
What you had was a violation of your terms of use, and I while I agree the guy’s probably a scumbag, the only issue here is that he was seen doing it.
Rest assured, others have done it without being seen, it’s a fact of life for a public code repo.
I suggest you:
(a) change “copywrite” to “copyright” in your code, since a copywrite is someone who writes stories, and a copyright is a legal term claiming ownership;
(b) file a dmca takedown notice with github; I run a hosting service and when we receive those, we take action;
(c) move on. Life’s too short, and all he has to do is republish it to another repo and keep you angry and not working on your code.
(d) actually file a copyright with your code so that he doesn’t do it then sue you for using his code;
I feel for you, but scumbags are what they are and there’s not much you can do about it unless you spend a ton of money to find and file a suit against him that you will probably not win.
Pick a topic, product, food, restaurant, etc. at random and think of (then write down) at least one way to improve it (even if subjective).
Now for each propose at least one method of doing it. If you don’t know how, then take a minute to google the processes that lead up to the improvement... slowly you internalize that knowledge and it becomes second nature.
It’s an exercise, but after a week or two you will come to do it naturally. Just make sure you tell people your ideas if your not going to use them.
I’ve found that when you “release” an idea, better ones follow.