Comment Re:Design was a major problem (Score 1) 359
It's still good compared to Facebook.
It's still good compared to Facebook.
if Microsoft did something like this (which they did in the 1990s), the masses would be at the gates with pitchforks and flaming torches screaming for blood.
No they wouldn't. Some geeks would be pissed off, which they were in the 90s.
When Google behaves like Microsoft did 20 years ago... well, meh, it's Google, they can do that. What's changed?
Nothing. Many of us are pissed off at Google for ruining good products they had. My bugbear is Google Navigate, and the removal of the separate "blue arrow" navigate icon. They totally fucked it up by rolling it up into Maps and changing the interface the way they did. Even to this day I install the old Maps APK on my Android phones.
Give me a technology that makes it less painful and i'll use it. If I can use it on an area of my body that doesn't usually get stuck (ass cheek? side of thigh? Anywhere where there is muscle behind the skin?) the pain level will be less.
Sounds like it'd be a pain in the ass.
I'm struggling to see how having your brains splattered on the wall is less grotesque than dying quickly from pure nitrogen inhalation.
Yup, I almost always go with Intel for my SSDs now. Not sure what I'm going to go to replace my 1TB Seagate backup drive, though; I don't know whether there are any SSDs that big that are of decent quality and affordable.
There's a difference between conquering and/or outcompeting a people and lining them up for systematic mass slaughter.
Hahahaha. So if Turkey had just driven the Armenians out of their homelands and left them to die in the desert (and only killed SOME of them), then that would've be A-OK?
It was a genocide. There may have been awful things happened to precipitate it, but it was a genocide and the record is fairly clear on this.
It would take courage for Turkey to accept this part of their past, apologize for it, and show that they are big enough to accept the bad and the good in their past. But they aren't, nationally, and these hackers are an example of that.
So when is the USA gonna 'fess up about its genocide of the native Americans?
This election won't be about gender or any substantive issues. The only choice is going to be between Crazy and Not Crazy and Hillary wins that going away.
Yeah. It's not like there are third parties or anything. First-past-the-post is an awesome electoral system!
No staging area - having to learn (and remember to keep constantly using) the mq extension to get similar-but-more-complex functionality - breaks the tie for me. In git's favour.
When I'm forced to use TFS for a project, I use Git locally and Git-TFS to keep them in sync. Now I commit often, all day long, tracking all my changes and (relatively) easy rolling them back or reordering them if necessary.
Lucky you. Where I am, we have such an enormous amount of crap checked into TFS classic that Git-TFS can't handle it.
Their director general is even named 'bigot'!
"Usually when I work, so much of my thought process is internal monologue," he said, "but with live streaming I try to narrate my thought process out loud. This has forced me to think through problems a little differently than I otherwise would, which has been really beneficial for me."
Yeah, just wait until you're in an actual office with other developers who try to narrate their thought processes out loud. You'll be wanting to throw chairs through windows in no time.
On average, developers who work remotely earn more than developers who don't.
I'm in the UK. Someone really needs to tell me how you get this double-whammy of goodness. I always end up getting employers that require me to be physically in the office and, apparently, lower wages.
So have a checkin hook that refuses to accept any checkins with lines that don't match
Linus actually likes 8 space tabs, on the grounds that if indentation starts to push code off the edge of the screen your code is wrong.
Good job I have a 5000px ultra-widescreen monitor.
Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle. -- Steinbach