Not sure why this is being downvoted. Deleting posts via scripts gave my Facebook a second life. I just use it for messenger and events. Highly recommended.
It's most likely easier to brute force a password than to break into someone's house. Would be easier to demand all credentials by gunpoint with that much effort.
I took Calculus AB in high school and the teacher was notorious for giving students D's and F's because of his teaching style was poor and the exams were difficult. The only saving grace from that class was that you would be given a C if you scored a 4+ on the AP exam.
He still kept his job because majority of the class got 4+'s on those exams, despite at least 1/3 of his class getting D's and F's.
I wouldn't generalize editing letter grades as a way of "cheating the system". There's usually good intentions in every act.
The author misses the point where Facebook was only able to attract talent to their company because of open source. FB currently employs the creators of Babel, Redux, and Inferno; whom otherwise would not be there without OSS to show their talents.
I've used Flow in 2016 and getting it to work on code editors was a huge pain. Coworkers asked me weekly how to fix their environment to get it to work.
In 2017 I introduced TS to the codebase and never looked back. It just works™.
Designing Data-Intensive Applications: The Big Ideas Behind Reliable, Scalable, and Maintainable Systems by Martin Kleppmann. Absolute best book on system design.
2. Are people on the Relay OSS team willing to answer StackOverflow-type questions on a certain time?
- I would want to be able to programmatically run relay-compiler. Every time I update my client-side code, webpack detects the change and then runs relay-compiler.
- And get help figure out some errors related to mutations I'm encountering. I wouldn't want to post these type of things as a GitHub issue because it could technically not be a bug.
"I expect Vue to become a primary JS framework in 16-24 months if Evan You makes right steps, at least around backenders and smaller teams of frontenders."
When Vue.js gets a big enough community passionate enough to host their own conference, we'll be able to consider this as a possibility. :)