Skip Navigation

Posts
0
Comments
168
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I'm not sure that what developers really, really need is faster programming cycles. Most teams could benefit more by controlling the process - from idea to deployed. How much technical debt is incurred because users/customers can't prioritize features or give accurate requirements, there's way too much WIP, features are huge, releases are huge and infrequent and the feedback cycles are far too long.

    So yeah, as programmers it's always cool to look at ways to program faster, but what's the point in programming stuff nobody needs faster? Or programming the wrong things faster?

    I'd be willing to be that if you asked any team, "What are the biggest impediments to delivering value to your users faster?", the answer would be that you can't cut code fast enough.

  • Calling customers, "guests". A customer is someone with a business relationship with someone/something else. They're exchanging money for goods and services and have a right to expect certain value for their money.

    A guest is something else entirely. A guest has no implicit right to expect a certain any particular level or quality of services. They are dependent on the magnamity of the "host".

    Calling a customer a "guest" robs them of status.

  • The head is shaped like a mushroom, so it cuts on the side and right on top. Unlike the others which are tube shaped.

    I just tried it. It does a pretty good job, but I don't have really furry ears.

  • That's what I thought until I got that one. Then I realized what I had been missing all along. Marketing? Nope. Just sharing what I found to be good.

  • I always feel this way about tailgaters. They don't seem to realize that they have given up all the power to the person they are tailgating.

  • Both of these are premium examples of book series that start out amazing and then start cicling the drain in book two. Add in "Ender's Game" for the trifecta.

    I expect downvotes.

  • I wonder. There could only be one r/something, so if the mod was bad you were stuck. But there's nothing to stop someone starting up another "something" community on another instance, if the mods suck in the first.

    So maybe power mods will wither away in the Fediverse.

  • I don't really agree with the degree of doom predicted by the article.

    The crux of the matter seems to be that once the workers went back to work they needed to give 72 hours notice to walk off again. That maybe a mistake by the Board, but hardly a calamity. They put in notice and walk off again. At worse, it stretches the length of the negotiations by 72 hours. In this case, it did not.

    If this is how the labour boards are going to interpret the laws, then the most likely outcome is that unions are going to stay off work until a tentative deal is accepted and ratified by the members. Why risk having to put in another 72 hours of notice?

    Is this good for the workers? No.

    Is this good for the employer? No.

    So maybe they have an agreement that no notice is necessary to go back to the picket lines if they return to work before ratification.

    I don't see any greater threat to worker rights here.

  • I dunno. The title was "Are there really no viable alternatives to PhotoShop on Linux?". I think it's fair to say, "There's GIMP". It's viable. People use it successfully and happily. 'Nuff said.

  • Test

    Jump
  • Not me 😭

  • The last rPi I bought was all of $40. I thought it was a bargain for the specs.

  • I just installed it and I'm very impressed. The widgets are especially cool.

  • Very often the copyright holders of the content have different distribution arrangements for different countries/regions. If you can get the content from some other region, then your local content provider isn't getting whatever fees/and revenue they would get from you.

  • I always thought Timothy Zahn was an above average author, and to wrote more than a dozen of them.

  • I really don't get this at all.

    On one hand, I get that inflation is just the expression of the supply/demand curve and that increasing interest rates makes it more expensive to borrow money and therefore lessens demand and should, theoretically drop inflation.

    But...

    Anyone with half a brain knows that this round of inflation wasn't caused by overheated demand. It was driven by supply chain issues caused by the pandemic, avian flu, climate change and the Ukraine war. The price of oil alone drove much of the inflation numbers, both directly and indirectly by increasing the cost of production and shipping of other goods.

    Does anyone at the BOC seriously think that 10%+ inflation in groceries was caused by overheated demand? Do they seriously think that people should be buying less food to lower grocery demand and reduce prices? Do they think that people will?

    Does anyone think that the 6-12 month waits for a new car that are typical now is because gazillions of people are suddenly wanting to buy all at the same time? OK, there probably is pent up demand due to the fact that virtually no new cars were available during the pandemic, and lots of people want EV cars now, but the truth is that availability is way down compared to pre-pandemic times.

    I see talking heads from the finance sector on TV all the time saying stuff like, "We need to tame an overheated economy...". DO WE? And then claiming that the interest rate hikes are working because inflation has come down. Yeah, right. Far more likely is that the supply chain issues are getting resolved, and supplies are increasing.

    The truth is that the BOC has only one knob that they can turn, and that's the interest rates. So they're going to turn it. And the prevailing wisdom says that it takes close to 18 months for interest rates hikes to have an impact. So the downturn in inflation that started at the beginning of the year has virtually NOTHING to do with the big jump in rates that happened last spring.

    As to that 18 month lag, it's probably even longer this time around because of the mortgage situation in Canada. Those people with huge mortgages have, to large degree, 5 year terms. So a comparatively small number of those people have had to renew under the new rates. And even if rates start to come back down next year, we're still going to see an increasing proportion of those mortgagees get hit with huge increases to their payments. And that's going to suck money out of the economy - big time. Are those people already tightening their belts, before they renew? Probably to some extent, but there's nothing like seeing an extra $2K-3K come out of your bank account each month to make it real.

  • Whenever we visit the UK we set the GPS units to metric. I have no feel for what, "In 140 yards, turn right", means. So having directions in metric while the street signs are in Imperial actually works best.

  • They've found the best way to reduce the threat of Russia without committing troops.

  • Chiropractic is sneaky bullshit. At the root of it is a belief that all kinds of ailments can be cured by chiropractic "adjustments" - and we're not talking back aches and sore joints here. It's woo along the same lines as homeopathy and acupuncture.
    But many/most chiropractors hide that bs, and seem to stick to back/joint issues. But in that case, are they really as qualified as a physiotherapist, osteopath, RMT or actual doctor? I mean, if their schools are teaching that you can cure, say, autism with a back adjustment, do you really want them treating you???