“He kind of comes off as the smartest person in the room,” said a former colleague.
Under a picture with just one person it’s kinda funny. Also what’s with that dirty floor? Same as with his shoes in the other picture. Gross. That’s lavish?
“He kind of comes off as the smartest person in the room,” said a former colleague.
Under a picture with just one person it’s kinda funny. Also what’s with that dirty floor? Same as with his shoes in the other picture. Gross. That’s lavish?
As you already implied: when you’re not at home but travelling.
The Pokemon is called Rattata. https://pokemondb.net/pokedex/rattata
Usually a sign of multiprocessing/multithreading going wrong, e.g. accessing the same resource without proper locks like opening the same logfile in different processes and trying to write simultaneously. Those errors can be triggered just by reformating the code (or obfuscating in this case), thus changing the runtime behaviour slightly. Hard to find, especially since they’re dependent on the speed/workload of the machine running the code.
That explains a lot about this song from Knorkator (German only): https://youtu.be/E_0rkQIufu8?si=AQsNUkK05_97HtE6
The shower head in the picture is a bit unusual because of the two screws on the right where you can adjust the head. If you loosen the one next to the wall the shower head tilts down and faces the wall (which is nice if warm water takes a while and you don’t like a cold shower) and with the other one you could make it spray the opposite wall. So it’s pretty versatile. (Or annoying if the screws can’t be tightened enough)
I’m curious. I’ve seen this exact type of shower (including the taps) only in Australia so far. Is it a common type in other countries too?
In short: it’s always like this, sometimes more, sometimes less. And guess what: it’s the main part of the job. As a developer you have to understand what the customer (your boss) needs (sometimes not what they say they want) and to figure out how to do that by yourself. It’s nice to have colleagues you can ask, but it’s like on stackoverflow. The accepted answer is not necessarily the right or good one. Often you have to work with bad documented legacy artifacts (code, api) and figure out what they do. Also the tech changes, you have to constantly keep up with changes and what was great years ago may now be outdated. My advice:
If you don’t like your working environment then change it. Especially when you think you can’t learn anything new there or it is no fun to work there. Go to meetings in your area (meetup or so) or online to meet other developers and ask them about their job. You get a feeling about what is considered a good job in your area. Good developers will always find a good job. Be one of them. As long as you think you’re a god who can code anything, that’s probably not the case. ;-) The best you can achieve is to be an expert in a very narrow field and to be good in some others.
200+ medical journals? No one get so old. Who would read these?
They insert sleep(1) and print statements. No shit. I had to fix this in two projects. One was a complete rewrite.
Educational. The evolution of Diggy Diggy hole: https://youtu.be/sI_PxGu7nZk?si=1QllVekmnrLI6SDH
Why would they use bitcoins to pay for the stream? If it’s already bitcoin why bother?
with Lemmy and Mastodon the opensource community has a place to really try itself out
Sorry, I have no idea what you’re talking about.
Here’s an article about it: https://dev.to/maggiecodes_/how-i-applied-to-a-tech-job-using-a-post-request-193d
The thing that annoys me is the response. It should return status 201 created and the id of the new resource for future delete/update operations. Instead it returns 200 ok and some clear text. Wouldn’t want to work with such an API.
Not very intimidating, as long as they keep on fucking.