The chances of dying in an accident in a vintage car far exceed the chance of being hacked. Choosing to drive that car is fine, but definitely not “for safety”
You got yourself into this mess. The good part about emojis is that they were a genderless raceless face. Then people wanted an emoji with a mustache and now good luck introducing 100 emoji combinations every year without upsetting some minority group. I’m still waiting for my Sikh beard emoji.
What’s your point? Technologies come and go. People built Ruby apps that did their job and now good luck finding maintainers for them. It’s just how our market works. We’re lucky if our stack lasts 10 years.
Yeah, ok, maybe you’re glossing over the immense difference that there is between what could be done on a mainframe vs what a Lambda allows, including all complementary services like per-second billing and granular permissions and logging. Now tell me that this is just the same thing as “mainframes” from the 80s.
I can't figure out exactly how it knows which chunk to download. Does it always download the whole index first? Or does it include it in the built JS file itself?
It's not that those commits are in any way useful, it's that this "fix the error" commit might be 3 commits after the commit it belongs to. If there are no conflicts, `!fixup` will handle it for you; But since this is the real world, you're likely going to waste huge amounts of time solving conflicts that help no one.
My solution is:
- small-scoped PRs
- attempt to keep sub-commits readable, but don't waste time on them
Squashed commits also link to the PR where not only do you get the original commit list, but also get the whole discussion around the code.
I’ll add. Fresh Big Sur install on the fastest MacBook 16” in store now: After changing the selected DOM element it takes several seconds to show its CSS on the right sidebar.
It feels like every dev tool sucks for me though. Chrome regularly froze the whole tab and crashes the tools on my old computer. Firefox I don’t remember exactly but also it was a PITA
It sucks because transactional emails still show up next to important emails. What’s a client that separates this without me manually doing so (via filter or whatever)?
Gmail is good at this when splitting the inbox, but after that it’s all forgotten (unless, once again, you add a manual filter to exclude such emails)
I think it generally depends on the market and on the route. I got some cheap flights in South East Asia in the week I flew, with prices being lower than average. This led to me postponing “what’s next” decisions to the last possible moment.
I routinely check several times before making a booking. I kept Hipmunk in my apps and bookmarks for years and never turned out a better deal. I deleted it probably only a few months before they closed up.
The interface was cute but that was ‘bout it for me.
1. Mark them all as spam. I never accept newsletters so I will consider every newsletter email as spam. They don't last much in my inbox.
2. Try inbox zero and just archive emails aggressively directly from your phone’s notification without even opening email.
My inbox currently has 10 emails that one day I'll get to and the rest of spam and transactional email is just gone from view within the hour or day.
I wish I could have an "important" and a "transactional" email view, but that's not going to happen without a lot of work, so email search still sucks.