I find the ethics of farming to be very difficult to live with.
I've been vegetarian now for long enough that I don't have any desire to eat meat and I am fairly grossed out by it. I am working towards vegan (again, the ethics), but it is proving to be more difficult. Perhaps my convictions aren't as strong?
My journey had several stops and starts. The best "trick" I have is to not stop eating meat, just start removing it from more and more meals. You just wake up one day and realize you haven't had meat in a year.
In my day to day, I don't really think about it anymore. I am always caught off guard when I realize other people are eating meat. It just isn't something that I consider now.
I believe that in the past you could move residences for free, but there was a time delay. Isn't this so you can move frequently/often? Eg. On a boat or in an RV?
I feel like this is the opposite of what you are claiming you want.
The common git workflow would be the thing you expect people to know off the top of their head. The uncommon less frequent ideas may need documentation.
Having team members memorize esoteric commands isn't the signal you're looking for. You want people who can read documentation and execute.
Tooling requirements change all the time. Knowing one tool really well doesn't mean anything. I care that you can pick up any tool, at any time and have a path forward to productivity.
To be fair and to agree with your original point, memorization isn't that path forward.
The easiest example I've heard is kinda gross and rude, but effective.
"You take a crap with the door closed, not because I don't know what you're doing in there, but because you don't want to share the experience with me."
That pretty much sums up everything you need to know about privacy. You don't have to hide anything in order for it to be important.
But it doesn't happen over night. The cracks are forming though.
Duckduckgo.com is now at 93,533,476 searches daily.
My non-technical brother just purchased a 3 year Fastmail account and switched from Chrome to Firefox. For added effect, he bought a subscription to Bitwarden. I didn't push him to do any of this, I just told him what I'm using.
His wife refused to put an internet enabled webcam in their new babies room, citing security concerns.
I don't see it. Clearly our motivations are misaligned. I'm not confident you can sell me on the idea that this will get people to trust them more, and therefore buy more apple stuff.
I do believe we should be skeptical of these companies stated positions unless we can see a profit motive. The previous stance that Apple said they had was "we value your privacy and you should pay us for that".
They also demonstrated in the case in 2016 with terrorists and the FBI that they meant it.
In this case, they have flipped entirely, and are now adding features without being compelled that subvert that stated goal.
Apple will scan your phone/data without a warrant AND report to the government now. This is their public opinion now. Forget their compelled and forced actions. Now they are proud to be the bad guys.
It is remarkable that Tim so clearly understood the problem in 2016.
With that one post, Apple and Tim earned trust from a group of people that trust very few. And in an instance, both Apple and Tim have now burned all of it.
I've been vegetarian now for long enough that I don't have any desire to eat meat and I am fairly grossed out by it. I am working towards vegan (again, the ethics), but it is proving to be more difficult. Perhaps my convictions aren't as strong?
My journey had several stops and starts. The best "trick" I have is to not stop eating meat, just start removing it from more and more meals. You just wake up one day and realize you haven't had meat in a year.
In my day to day, I don't really think about it anymore. I am always caught off guard when I realize other people are eating meat. It just isn't something that I consider now.