

It’s almost always slow is ways that the language choice doesn’t matter even a little


It’s almost always slow is ways that the language choice doesn’t matter even a little


My first assignment as a professional programmer I balked at. I said it was “Unethical and immoral.” And when they told me I “had to do it” I said that I don’t and that they shouldn’t find someone else. My boss stepped in, chewed me out and told me to she would do it. Instead of putting her foot down there was just always another priority. It never got done in the ten years of the project.
The head of IT at one of my old jobs won 3 or 4 iPhones circa 2007
My team just had a super productive in office day. I thought “wow I can see why people think in office is more productive” and then I realized my entire team was remote that day but me so it was more like a fully remote day for the team.


I won’t be shocked if steam is running on it in 15 years. Their pace feels unreal.


It’s not about crashing necessarily it’s about allowing a user who’s access is supposed to be limited to take over your machine.


But it doesn’t just make things take longer to compile. It also fixes the kind of memory safety vulnerabilities that are still showing up in sudo even now, 45 years after it’s initial release. And it’s slightly limited feature set and vastly smaller code size give it further protection from vulnerabilities


No. Still sudo


It’s not new and it doesn’t have a lot to do with rust really. Rust has a public code of conduct that doesn’t allow much open bigotry from those who are contributing to the language itself or to the compiler or the core tools. Some people really hate this.


I find AI to be extremely knowledgeable about everything, except anything I am knowledgeable about.
This matches my experience exactly. The problem is that the C suite isn’t generally an expert in anything, and don’t even realize it. They’re going to keep thinking AI is amazing forever and not understand that’s where the crash came from.


Every software engineering job expects you to come in trained and they have since at least the eighties. The standard training for a software engineer is a four year BS or BE. We’ve been churning out too many for sure, but employers have never trained developers from scratch. And they will always need to train developers in their own business and systems.


qa.
All development happens in feature branches. Someone other than the original developer needs to build and test the feature on our development servers. If successful it gets merged into qa, where it gets built and tested against it qa servers. Production build are tags on qa.
I’m fairly sure there’s no way to do remote Wayland from Windows, yet without X11. But what do I know? I’m running ububtu 22.04 still
I’m pretty sure I installed powershell on my Ubuntu box
Yeah, I’m not sharing that. I’m fairly sure it was legal, though.