> Divide your life into 10-minute units and sacrifice as few of them as possible in meaningless activity.
Sounds like hell. I am not a robot. And how am I going to do it. Take an hour before work to plan 48 10 Minute sessions for the day. What if something important comes up?
Or take a 1 minute block every 10 minutes to figure out what to do for the next session?
God forbid I have to take a call, take a p*ss, or my noodle pot boils over while I wfh.
ah yes. Because there is a direct and clear road ahead from requirement to implementation. Requirements don't change and if they do it doesn't have any impact on existing parts of the software. /s
The thing that was most disturbing was just how quickly the water rose. The Ahr, typically 10-15 ft wide and maybe about a feet deep, just enough to cool a beer crate during hot summer, went up to something like 23ft.
I was joking with my mum on the phone late afternoon when they told me our camper got towed uphill as a precautionary measure.
Not 2h later they had to be evacuated and the whole campsite was gone, as in does not exist anymore.
The salary discussion aside. That's what I have always been ad odds with OSS.
Nobody is forcing you to put it up for free.
Put a price tag on it an sell it. If it doesn't sell, lower the price. If it still doesn't sell, good. Stop trying to force adoption on software that cannot sustain itself.
first scrapping old but reliable cars with cash incentives to buy "clean" diesel. Then dieselgate pushing for gasoline powered cars and getting pennies on the dollar back. Now killing ICE alltogether.
Not going to buy VW Group cars anytime soon.
There is an interesting paper on bouyancy optimization in 3d printing. You could define a waterline and orientation on any 3d shape and print it so that it stays afloat.