It's clearly a biased example intended to make the white collar readers of the WSJ feel good.
In reality, another example of a non-internet job is NBA professional basketball player. Those guys make plenty of money, Internet is NOT required.
But then again, listing those examples would make some of the white collars question their life choices...
Why does everything have to be profitable? If that were the case then your local potable water plant wouldn't exist, or the sewer plant, or roads, or
Exactly this, the "spec" is almost always a very rough draft that is largely written and consumed by people that want to feel like they contribute to the project even though they don't understand the customer or the developer situation that well. You might reference it a bit in your first offering and then ignore it as the stakeholder sees what the spec produces and realizes the spec wasn't really what they wanted when they see it live.
Once upon a time more weight was given to design, but the industry largely realized that all that very careful effort just became a liability of sunk cost fallacy when they realized the resultant output was not desired, but so much work had gone into the spec we don't want to change.
Nowadays it's a way that PMP minded folks feel like they are core technical contributors without learning to code. This is of course the target audience. Spoke to an executive that sincerely believes the only thing of irreplaceable value is his 'insight' and over 90% of his employees are going to be dismissed since he can just do it all himself. In practice his is the *first* job that could go to LLM, as all he ever says is either obvious stuff or just confidently wrong and his business decisions amount to "all we need is more customers and for them to pay more for it and we will be profitable"... Genius.
Not so surprising that red-socialism and brown-socialism are almost the same.
Not any different from using Windows without AI.
I suppose the Germans weren't actually occupying Ukraine?
Oh, it's roman_mir, your grasp of history is tenuous at best so I shouldn't be surprised.
Bandera's idea was that once Germany conquered the USSR he was going to rule it as a vassal state for the Nazis. Hitler on the other hand had no intention of any Slavic "untermenchen" being allowed to rule anything so put him under arrest. His fanatics still continued to happily serve their Nazi masters, and carried out many massacres of Roma, Jews and Poles. Several of the death camps were guarded by Ukrainian POWs, apparently the Germans felt safe arming them as long as they had Jews and Poles to abuse.
Today's Ukrainian government sees no issue with putting up statues to Bandera or his henchmen just blocks away from the massacre sites.
Fun fact, there has been two Linux distributions officially certified as "UNIX". Inspur and Huawei for whatever reason bothered to get them officially certified.
On the flip side, there's an odd sentence in the XDG specification that explicitly qualifies the wording around filesystem feature requirements to apply only to Unix-like platforms. Clearly they had Unix in mind, but they explicitly bothered to give an implicit pass to any hypothetical non-Unix, non-Unix-like platforms.
Even if you do keep the key safe, it's impossible to keep YOU safe. A heart attack, a drunk truck driver, a falling meteorite -- are all pretty good at destroying wetware.
Bixby's Law says, "In any security installation the weakest link is not in the hardware or the software, but in the wetware."
On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog. -- Cartoon caption