What I would like to know here is whether the suggested serving amounts in those countries are adjusted, as well.
Sugar is bad for our health, sure, but it's not like it is rat poison. It gives easily digestible calories and in a product like baby formula, where you have defined amounts of that product to consume every day, "added sugars" in a vacuum does not seem to be such a big problem to me.
If you have not encountered it yet, I highly recommend Ben Eater's 8-bit computer series (https://eater.net/8bit/). I don't remember any other piece of material which made me grok the deep underpinnings of CPU instructions as this. There was an almost surreal moment where my brain went "ooooooh, this is how a CPU instructions is just a complex network of switches with on/off states". Ben Eater's other material is also great, he's just a good teacher.
Building on that, the "NAND2Tetris" starts, as the name suggests, with basic logic gates and packages these low level concepts Matryoshka-style into recursive boxes with the end goal of programming a Tetris clone. See https://www.nand2tetris.org/
As someone who never enjoyed reading non-fiction books (and still doesn't), I've talked about this topic with someone who successfully devours books on the topic of "How to be a great boss". Their suggestion was that while there are many Greats, each with a devout following of their own, you as a non-convert aren't really expected to deeply study GTD and the like and then either Join The Club or better have a good reason not to like this magnum opus. That space of books can be enjoyed simply by lightly reading them, seeing what sticks with you - personally - and then moving on. Since the subject and the methods on offer are so broad, it is really ok to just think "meh" and not waste anymore time on PARA etc., if in that specific case the method just doesn't resonate with you. This is how I arrived at my very slimmed down version of Bullet Journaling - it was supposed to solve my problem and I realized that it's ok not to be a stationery influencer with forty shades of pastels arranged in slightly chaotic groups so they look nice on the Insta.
I think the corollary to this question pattern is always: "And if yes, who cares?" If the software in question is open source, the ones using it will still have enough access to it even if it were dying. The ones not using it don't want it anyway and chose one of the many other options.
Looks really interesting and I love the name! So, to deploy it in my (trusted) infrastructure, all I need is to clone it and put it on my server? I'll discuss it with my team
I found nand2tetris a very natural progression for me after finishing Ben Eater's great 8bit computer series (https://eater.net/8bit/). It just makes you grok so many basic concepts of computer design which are quite often glossed over. A perfect project to start over the holidays!
Can someone help me understand the premise of this article? I think the goal here is to map the internal books of a business to their bank account, but I have never seen the kind of "grouping" the article seems to assume as given. In which scenarios do these groupings happen? If there are several customers, there will be different invoices and therefore separate payments. Why would the bank just throw them together, thereby creating the problem this article is trying to solve? I'm asking from Germany, in case this is one of these Europe-US kinds of differences.
Sugar is bad for our health, sure, but it's not like it is rat poison. It gives easily digestible calories and in a product like baby formula, where you have defined amounts of that product to consume every day, "added sugars" in a vacuum does not seem to be such a big problem to me.