
Where I live, you don’t get any compensation whatsoever unless you have to spend more than like 5 days or something, and it only kicks in for time spent after that point.

Where I live, you don’t get any compensation whatsoever unless you have to spend more than like 5 days or something, and it only kicks in for time spent after that point.
Management is hoping LLMs improve to replace senior developers before it becomes a problem

You can’t close it, I close it!
Couldn’t you just try and register the username to see if it’s valid?
Holy self aggrandizing. “I’m gonna be the next Zuckerberg think of how this will look to investors.” Get real

You don’t actually get that much storage doing this unless you increase the scale by a couple order of magnitude. At which point you’re basically describing building a dam in practical terms.
That’s a lot of fucking words to say that want to replace you because you’re paid a lot and they would rather not.
I tried their demo. It didn’t let me input my postal code because it’s 7 characters. It would have been even worse if the field only accepted numbers like the author implies it should. I obviously didn’t expect it to auto fill, but the fact that I can’t even input my postal code at all is the same annoyance I’ve had with almost every American service. The fact that there’s even a field for “country” in the demo is a joke. If you’re going to make your form for the US only, why bother including a country field? If it is international, country goes first, I don’t know why that’s even a concession at the end of the article, it should be the foundation.
Also the suggestion to auto fill the country based on IP has problems but I would go out on a limb and say most people are not travelling or using a VPN so I’ll let this slide.

I imagine one of the most important factors is we don’t have a way to accurately scan a brain to correctly reproduce all those trillions of connections. We don’t have a blueprint to go off. Or if we do it’s probably prohibitive in scale to collect that.
I always love the responses to these videos because it’s invariably a bunch of skilled Linux people showing their entire ass trying to justify why the average user would somehow have had a magically better experience and the OP is uniquely bad at computers. Get fucking real. Sit down, shut up, and take notes. It’s never going to be the year of the Linux desktop if you ignore the issues encountered by new Linux users.

It’s so they can get both the benefit of the first strike and then when Iran retaliates they can claim they turned down a ceasefire.
Because international diplomacy is a universe of bullshit and lies
They are trained to yap because it gives them a higher likelihood of giving the correct answer. If they don’t go on and on in user presented text, it at least does it in hidden text.
Scaling up fabs to increase supply is a very long-term process. You don’t want to do it if you think the demand won’t last at least several years. Maybe RAM manufacturers are drinking the koolaid and are spinning up fabs as fast as possible. Maybe they see the writing on the wall and are just cashing in until the demand dissolves.

It’s not true. We remember experiences that elicit strong emotions better. This is a separate matter entirely from the fact that we engage more with negative content. Engaging with and remembering something are different things.
“You say we live indoors yet you pointed to four walls, a door, and a roof. None of these is specific to a building.”
Fucking hell
It’s a pretty good experience, but I will say that KDE’s stylus calibration leaves much to be desired. Windows lets you add as many calibration points as you desire through a comment. KDE on Wayland doesn’t support non linear calibration yet.