I don’t think it should be banned but instead regulated and I think Apple has a unique opportunity here that will make them win this product category in fashion & social acceptability: Make the glasses glow. Have the top horizontal frame of the glasses illuminate when it’s recording and be able to glow on command
By making the glow a fashion aspect of the glasses, the fact that it should glow loudly will become a socially known part of the glasses. Because it’s Apple and because a good chunk of the frame needs to glow it’ll have a distinct look that’ll be easy to spot and if anyone has tampered with them to disable it, they can be asked to verify that it hasn’t by making it able to glow on command “Hey Siri, glow/party”.
The author said nothing of the people but of the government itself. 12 years ago, elementary school children were slaughtered and even that wasn’t enough to ban guns.
> If the person they were quoting claimed to have been abducted by sasquatch, you could still make these two points. Would you still be arguing that it doesn't reflect poorly on the BBC to put that false claim into a headline?
No? That’s a very good headline for an article about someone who believes that they were abducted by a Sasquatch. It would be a missed opportunity for a newspaper to NOT do.
It would depend on the course load. Learning languages and how to use them can easily be encapsulated in capstone, software engineering projects, & internships. The goal of a CS degree, as opposed to a bootcamp, is for students to fully understand in intimate detail the background , history, ethics, & the 5 whys of the tool that they’re using. The way I would design a CS degree is:
1. for the first two years to be about general computing with an intro to programming via Java, Typescript, Python, & Go.
2. by the end of the 2nd year Data Structures and Algorithms should be mastered
3. Third year is for tracks , whether frontend, backend, full stack, Theory.
4. Fourth year is capstone project or internship
Or they do enough programming from 9-5 that they don’t feel like doing anymore when they get home to their family? Programmers don’t have to do anything more then their paid to do
> Let's say Google release a new phone that is significantly cheaper and/or smarter than an Apple one. nobody would stick to apple.
This is not at all how the consumer phone market works. Price and “smarts” are not only factor that goes into phone decisions. There are ecosystem factors & messaging networks that add significant friction to switching. The deeper you are into one system the harder it is to switch.
This seems like a bit of an over exaggeration. A pull request isn’t just a chunk of code thrown at people. it’s an entire process with a Title , description, pipeline checks that all come together to say I want this in another branch.
As the PR author it should be your job to:
* Self Review the PR
* Ensure you adhere/fulfill to all the expectations and requirements a PR should have before it’s pulled out of draft
* That all pipeline test pass
* That for a given request X there is test that validate X, Not X , and edge cases of X and are ran in the pipeline.
* Has a clear description of what you’re changing/adding/removing, why, how, and the rollout plan , roll back plan , & the risk level.
The peer review process should make the reviewer engage in a rubber duck process to review their code , loop the team in for changes that can change their mental model of how a system they own works, and to catch things that we might not catch ourselves.
> The sentence is convoluted but clearly implies that "this kid" was "one of the MAGA gang".
What? This is crazy “find the authors purpose” gymnastics. The quote does nothing to imply that the kids is Maga or not. It does however directly commentates on “Maga gang”’s actions to try to paint him as anyone other than someone who could be MAGA. Thats the entire point of what was said
Don’t apply through linked in , apply directly via the company career site
what apply materials are you submitting ? are you doing cover letters ?. As a grad how many new grads positions did you apply to?
> For normal speech, text is essentially a 1:1 recreation.
More of a 1:0.5 or even 1:0.25. There is a lot lost in text to speech,such as tone and volume two very aspect of speech, that affect what is said and attempted to be conveyed. Not to mention their are certain little tidbits you can do in speech that is not a lossless translation. I don’t disagree that voice notes take up more time than text, but Speech and text are far from 1:1.