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Woden501

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Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
"unconscious bias silliness" so you're telling me that an interviewer is just as likely to hire someone who has visible issues sitting still/focusing on a video call as they are someone who sits perfectly still and gives their full 100% attention to the call? No, not a chance. When there are two candidates for a position at approximately equal skill levels when performing a video interview but one has ADHD that comes along with the inability to remain solely focused on one small screen and voice for an extended period of time you can guess which candidate is going to be picked the vast majority of the time. Dismissing such a huge issue as silliness is exactly the reason why many people who have issues similar to that do not want to perform video calls for interviews.
Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
This implies that body language is accurate and useful which is not always the case. I'd argue that many who legitimately don't wish to be on camera have very good reasons for this. I do not enjoy being on camera or even talking on the phone. I also have ADHD which makes it very difficult to just sit still and listen/watch an AV feed for a significant period of time even if I know that what is occurring on that feed is very important. My brain literally doesn't care what my mind thinks/knows it's going to do what it wants/needs to do which is fidget, search for sources of stimulation, and in general do all kinds of things considered "rude" to do when having a conversation or attending a meeting. Nevermind that I'm absolutely still paying attention, but I can't JUST pay attention. A lot of this hesitation to appear on camera in situations like mine isn't because I don't actually like being on camera, I don't care, but the negative reactions me being on camera can cause because someone doesn't know me and my specific uh... "issues" means that I just prefer not do so if possible.
Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
Wait this is confusing for anyone beyond a fresh-faced junior dev? An Integer is an object while 100 is a primitive. Of course two different objects aren't going to be equal since they're literally not the same object. Two primitives of the same value will be though because they are the same primitive. It's exactly the same behavior across many languages.

This right here is why it's critical to have developers of all levels across a team. Those of use who have been doing this long enough don't remember what caused us issues as juniors. We need the mid-levels to translate and remind us of these things lol
Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
Sure it's "tidier" if by that you mean smaller. Someone who doesn't work in Python all the time and isn't aware of these kinds of operators is going to have to spend a decent amount of time unpacking what the hell that all means whereas someone can take one look at the standard while loop, see the logic laid out plainly, understand what's happening, and make changes, if necessary, fairly easily. Unless there's a performance benefit to an operator like this I'll forgo "tidy" for clear any day of the week. Then again I'm just a senior dev whose only professional experience with Python was maintaining other people's Python projects who never had to touch them again after they wrote them, and who used Python for things Python should not have been used for just because it's "easy" to write.
Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
I imagine that many of these aren't common ones to run into with a team that comes from many languages other than Python or that has people with enough experience to know that realize these kids of unclear, apparently inconsistent coding practices are not a good idea in code you want to be maintainable a year or more from now. The glance I took at a few of them shows me the smack of syntatic sugar that is all aesthetics without any real performance benefit thus provide no real benefit beyond maybe saving a few keystrokes. Keystrokes are cheap, days spent by a junior dev trying to find a bug in a pile of syntatic sugar filled Python is not.
Woden501
·4 anni fa·discuss
1 bedroom apartments go for closer to $700 or even as low as $400ish in Dayton just an hour and a half south of Columbus. Even here though housing prices are skyrocketing, so that won't be the case for long. Prices in Columbus are going to be absolutely ridiculous once this fab opens unless housing prices plummet for other reasons.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
Seems they may have finally noticed the hit from a decent number of the pro's using their products migrating to different platforms, and realized they needed to take a few steps back on the more radical innovations to put out a solid working machine. Hell I haven't wanted an Apple machine since the early days of the unibody when other manufacturers started releasing the same form-factor. This has me considering one for my next development machine depending on the price premium over the competition.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
No consumer CPU comes close. Just saw an article about the next-gen Xeon's with HBM though that blows even this away (1.8TB/s theoretically), but what else would one expect from enterprise systems. Getting pretty damn excited about all the CPU manufacturers finally getting their asses into gear innovation-wise after what feels like a ridiculously long period of piss-warm "innovation".
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
Completely and patently false. Amazon is literally copying and reselling completely unique designs/products after determining through their marketplace data that it would be worth their time to do so. They're using their own data to undermine the companies that they should be dealing with in good faith.

It doesn't sound bad when you're just talking about one product or company but we're not just talking about one. Amazon has done this to thousands of products as part of a plan to use third party sellers as guinea pigs to see what products will sell enough to rip off. This is systemic anti-competitive behavior that is at the very least unethical if not outright criminal.

https://www.theverge.com/2021/3/3/22311574/peak-design-video...
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
You ask that about Facebook and thanks to the recent outage we can already see that YES Facebook is having a significant impact on traffic to non-Facebook news sites. When Facebook went down earlier this month there was a 40% spike in traffic to news sites during the outage.

Now imagine a company that has been just as effective as Facebook at replacing/consuming/killing it's competition in the retail space and you've got Amazon. If Amazon went down for a proportional extended period, say for a few days, you'd likely see a massive spike in sales at other retailers just as we saw a massive spike in new site traffic when Facebook was down.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
The US has defense agreements with at the very least Taiwan and the Philippines and more distantly Japan. Allowing China to claim the South China Sea would seriously hamper the US' ability to meet the obligations in those treaties. Not to mention that ensuring products produced in that area are able to be shipped through the South China Sea is absolutely essential as is evidenced by the effects of the current chip shortage. If access to TSMC products was suddenly cut off by China it would cause massive issues across the world and especially so in the US.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
Apparently you don't understand what the word Suggested means. Do you also report every single classic car that is selling for higher value that it was initially sold for? If not then you're pretty much just being an asshole for no reason.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
I'm sorry but the second these words left his mouth obviously indicating his displeasure with the likelihood of Amazon winning the contract he had influenced the outcome.

“I will be asking them to look at it very closely to see what’s going on because I have had very few things where there’s been such complaining,” Trump said. "Not only complaining from the media — or at least asking questions about it from the media — but complaining from different companies like Microsoft and Oracle and IBM. Great companies are complaining about it. So we’re going to take a look at it. We’ll take a very strong look at it. Thank you very much everybody.”

He head already shown at this point that he was an old boys club type of guy that would go after anyone who disagreed and support anyone who kissed his ass, so anyone having a hand in the selection of the winner of the contract that wanted favor with the president would obviously attempt to influence the outcome to not be Amazon.

He should have kept his mouth shut on such a massive pending contract, but it's pretty obvious by now that keeping his mouth shut isn't something he's physically capable of doing.

Now instead of having started on a crucial service that is needed by our military we're looking at likely further years of delays. All because the president was butthurt over some mean words in a newspaper.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
And what do you know I've gotten random items shipped to me that I never ordered from at least three of these brands, so they were using that method to boost their stats too.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
It's a very real threat and possibility thus an absolutely appropriate question to be asking. There are numerous documented instances of espionage performed by Chinese nationals while operating within the US educational system.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/china/american-universities-are...
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
+1 to your third point especially. I'll even add that Agile development can be a big bonus in any market that has the potential for rapidly changing needs. Even if you don't lose out to your faster competition you may still end up releasing to a market that's no longer looking for the solution that you "perfected". Agile development allowing you to release a functional product as soon as possible, and adding to it as resources allow means you can pivot your development to meet new demands instead of bogging yourself down trying to produce the perfect solution to a problem that continues to evolve.
Woden501
·5 anni fa·discuss
Exactly. When I first learned about Agile development they clearly stated there is no "Agile process". It is simply having only the minimum amount of actual documented/enforced practices needed to ensure smooth development. Is your team struggling to finish tasks because they're not communicating enough? Have a morning check-in where anyone who is having an issue can state their issue, someone else can chime in that they can/know how to assist, and they can discuss it afterwards. Team being overwhelmed by requests for new/unplanned work? Set up a task tracking system and prioritize your tasks ensuring things get done in the order they need to be with none forgotten. Software development doesn't look the same anywhere you go. What works for one team/customer/environment won't necessarily work for any other. Agile is adapting the process to the people. Alternatives like CMMI do the opposite by forcing the people to adapt to the process.

The number one issue I've encountered in my area is companies that say they use Scrumm when they really don't. Scrumm is a very specific, defined process, and as they clearly state in their "handbook" if you're not following the process exactly as it's described then you aren't doing Scrumm. Period.
Woden501
·6 anni fa·discuss
The 3900X was one of the highest-end consumer Zen2 CPUs. If I'm remembering correctly only the 3950X was above it without jumping up to the Threadripper line of CPUs.