“You should get the Electrum tier. It comes with a +5 to all d20 rolls. It’s only $80 a month if you do a 5 year plan.”
“You should get the Electrum tier. It comes with a +5 to all d20 rolls. It’s only $80 a month if you do a 5 year plan.”
“Roll for initiative.”
“Sorry, give me just a minute. I got logged out of my dice.”
Interesting, I process time being as a set idiomatic phrase rather than a modifier+ so there’s no need for emphasis on one part or the other. And time being as similar to human being wouldn’t get emphasis unless it was contrasting with a different kind of being. But I also think we’re muddying different types of stress, namely word stress vs prosodic stress. I think your reading has to do with the latter but your example is about the former.
Do you pronounce being and being differently?
Jeremy Bearimy.
Cicd is pretty replaceable for any workflow regardless of platform. What’s the killer feature of actions for you?


Every time I know somebody is in the market, I get them a copy of What Color is Your Parachute. It gets updated every year. It’ll help with finding a targeted position that wants your skills.
I hate working for big corporations. Recruiters will only find you the worst contract jobs. Finding where the small businesses are looking is something that shook out of the book for me. The methods you’re using are all the methods that the large companies want you to use and you’ll almost always get filtered out. Find places where small companies are looking for your specific skills. They don’t want to be awash in dozens of resumes anymore that you want to be blasting your resume out there to dozens of systems that are only there to filter you out. The places might be a niche job posting website, might mean an industry event, etc.


Is it ironic if the audience knows it’s not but the people they’re talking about don’t know?


As barely a teen back then, Breath of Fire 2’s stuck with me because of the scantily clad shamans on page 32.


The people over at feddit.uk/c/nominativedeterminism might like this, too.
That’s legacy code from the 80s. Please update it when you get the chance.


Usually when I pick it up it’s only for about two weeks. Then I get back to my job and leave the house again.
Esperanto always struck me as more perl-like with each part of speech having its own suffix like perl has $ for scalars, @ for arrays, and % for hashes. Though perl is probably more like a bunch of pidgins…


Oh geeze, this seems like it’s going to be a productive discussion that’s starting out in good faith.
My code is not that pretty. Move the eyes to the wrong place and add three. Remove one clavicle. Right arm is a tentacle, left arm is a robot one, back arm is a crab. Not a crab’s arm, a whole crab.