Comment Two words: (Score 1) 55
Engineered obsolescence.
Engineered obsolescence.
The business models of today's tech companies revolve around one simple assertion. Consumers can never be allowed to actually own the devices they paid for...they can only rent them.
I hope you were taking notes. This will be on the final exam.
Is it possible that Dorsey has never heard of Meshtastic or MeshCore?
So what you're saying is "block means BLOCK" is somehow bad.
A code generator will invariably produce code which is buggier than the generator.
Caveat emptor.
"You've stolen what I've rightfully kidnapped!"
An Executive Order issued Monday implemented a full hiring freeze on all Federal positions within the executive branch, except for military recruitment or positions related to public safety or national security. The positions cut within these advisory committees meet that definition.
That said, several departments are announcing broad exemptions to that hiring freeze. Whether these advisory committees meet the criteria to be exempted remains, as the saying goes, a game-time decision.
"Elsevier responded that the editors shouldn't be paying attention to language, grammar, readability, consistency, or accuracy of proper nomenclature or formatting."
What do they see as the editor's job, then? Because to me, it sounds like what they're saying is that editors shouldn't be...you know...EDITING.
Users are moving to BlueSky, among other reasons, because "Block" means BLOCK. Once one user blocks another, there can be no further interaction between the two users unless the first user removes that block. Contrast this to the former Twitter, where a recent policy change allows blocked users to continue to view the blocking user's posts and comments, arguably creating a vehicle for cyberstalking...or worse.
In combination with a distinct lack of advertising, no algorithms that promote or demote individual posts, and the ability to read followed accounts' posts in reverse chronological order instead of scattered across the timeline by the previously-mentioned algorithms, the attractiveness of BlueSky becomes more apparent. In short, it's what Twitter was in the beginning, but with better guardrails.
Trying to sue Amazon won't have any effect whatsoever, after last week's Loper-Bright decision by the Supreme Court. If Amazon lose, they will appeal and cite that case, and the courts will de-fang the FERC and let Amazon buy as much power as they want, because the courts are now the final arbiters of regulations, and the actual regulatory agencies are just decorative puppet theatre.
More and more tech companies are sinking their teeth into the same approach: customers don't actually buy anything from them. The customers only rent the products. It doesn't matter if it's hardware or software; the overarching approach today is exactly the same. Even if one has physical media (which, by design, has become increasingly rare) from which to load and run software, if an online handshake must be performed to enable any of that software's functionality, the publisher can turn that handshake off at the drop of an accountant's whim, and you're left with what may be a rather expensive coaster.
That's as far as I go.
This will be filed under "if you can't make a better product, tear down your competitor in court".
'Nuff said.
This is nothing more than closing the barn door after the horses have escaped. Pay attention to what they AREN'T saying: "We'll stop selling your data."
'Nuff said.
As I recall, Ada uses Algol syntax, e.g.
The biggest gripe I've ever heard from developers coming from the C-family world trying to learn Ada is that Ada doesn't permit mathematical operations on pointers...or, at least, it didn't as of the Ada-95 variant, which is what I last used in class.
About the time we think we can make ends meet, somebody moves the ends. -- Herbert Hoover