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shorner

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shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
Now that you mention it, I think there's a real lack of grandmas in tech... maybe I shouldn't be saying this publicly, but we don't have any at our company.
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
I think it's a fair question - hardware companies have recalled and replaced dangerous components before.

I got a free replacement battery from Apple in the mid 2000's when they said that a batch of their batteries had a "small fire risk"...

If I'm being cynical, I guess it depends if their line is:

"the old battery is dangerous which is why we've changed the materials we use"

or

"we're changing the materials we use, and that has this interesting side effect that totally coincidentally fixes a dangerous issue with out old batteries"
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
Unrelated, but there was a time when I vastly preferred Microsoft Entourage and Microsoft Word on a Mac to the Windows versions. They both had features that their windows counterparts didn't for quite a while!

Then they unified the teams that made their products for the different platforms and we ended up with the ribbon toolbar UI, which was a pure example of "good looking UI over functionality". I remember using excel with the ribbon toolbar, and it was really easy to put a funky pattern on my bar charts, but annoyingly fiddly to extrapolate data - ie. to actually use excel for science...

It's got to be said that if it was my company I would still have unified the teams. I probably would have ok'd the ribbon toolbar too, as I imagine that if I was running Microsoft I probably wasn't doing a lot of data analysis myself and I wouldn't know any better.
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
alternative for 4. open Preview, and use Annotate->Signature to configure a signature to drop in straight on your Mac.
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
These comments cover it pretty much, but also relevant was that it was quite rare for women to own land as it would often transfer to the family (ie. husband) on marriage (essentially, heiresses), or to male heirs on death (or only to only-child heiresses if they married).

Widowhood and un-eligable female only-children were one of the main ways women were able to be landowners way back when.

This is regarding England at some point in history - I'm unsure both when in history this stopped, and how similar this was to any other places in Europe or the rest of the world.
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
There's a column-statue on a hill in rural Wiltshire (England) of a widowed trader named Maud Heath who made a causeway for traders to get to and from their nearest market town. The details of the story vary depending on the source or people you talk to, but wikipedia has most common parts of the bare bones of the history there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maud_Heath%27s_Causeway
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
Or just generally starchy code?

Now I just want to figure out all of the food analogies for bad code patterns...
shorner
·5 năm trước·discuss
I can safely assume that, having clicked that link, I'm going to get a slew of interesting amazon recommendations