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Posts
34
Comments
178
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I have a lot of experience as a software engineer in the industry, and used to teach public middle school. I would love to teach a course or two a year because education is a passion of mine, but only have a BA of Education, do you think it's worth applying to teach at my local community college? I saw my local college had a requirement of a master's degree in CS, which I do not have.

  • I learned how to type with this, at the age of 22 as a full time software engineer! I never knew how to touch type, but then I somehow landed a software engineering job. I figured I needed to learn, so I downloaded this and played it so much. Good times.

  • I'd prefer it over just a grass yard or being right up on a road having to listen to road sounds at all hours

  • I mean, right now I'm shopping for a house with a decent sized property so I can grow a permaculture food forest to get fresh healthy veggies and fruit.

    20' of lawn is like enough for two rows of fruit trees and berry bushes

  • Oh no just like in the Hyperion Cantos, THE TUNNELS ARE FILLED WITH BODIES

  • Ah yes, that would make sense.

    I'm over here thinking like a firefighter trying to ventilate a roof, not like a contractor trying to install a window.

  • Chainsaw and a skylight. A big one too, like one of these

    And yeah, yeah, I've heard they are a pain to maintain and break easily. I don't care, I'll fix it every week if that means I get a balcony and fresh air every day.

  • Oh man I work with one of the PhDs who invented several of the space weather formulas. He's got books about it. I want to show him this so bad, but I don't think he would find it funny 😭

    Maybe he'd laugh at the evil wizards part.

  • You know what, everyone's saying is cringe to bring up being a maintainer. But I say be proud of it!

    You volunteer on this project for free, to build us this awesome place to be. Thanks for doing that, keep it up, be the best contributor you can! I'm happy to have Lemmy, thanks for helping make it possible!

  • Oh man, I live deep in Wawa country, just a few miles from their headquarters. Everyone I know gets 90% of their food from Wawa, it's wild.

  • Oh man this good me laughing way too hard, well done

  • CrossFit, running club, November project, hiking club, board game clubs, DND clubs, Meetup.com events. Coed sports leagues like: disc golf, infinite Frisbee, soccer.

    There's also things like live figure drawing, music jam clubs, acting in local plays.

  • Hmmm good point but they all survive at the end, so I'd classify it as a traumatizing and disturbing action movie

  • Made this just for you, red hot off the press

  • Learn to let things go, like water under the fridge

  • Ok but what crow time comic,

    Edit, Crow Time is amazing

  • I suppose this is a hot take, but I'd never intentionally select a closed source paid database or programming language. Your data is the most valuable thing you have. The idea that you'd lock yourself into a contract with a third party is extremely risky.

    For example, I've never seen a product on Oracle that didn't want to migrate off, but every one has tightly coupled everything Oracle so it's nearly impossible. Why start with Oracle in the first place? Just stay away from paid databases, they are always the wrong decision. It's a tax on people who think they need something special, when at most they just need to hire experts in an open source database. It'll be much much cheaper to just hire talent.

    Meanwhile I've done two major database shifts in my career, and you are correct, keeping to ANSI standard SQL is extremely important. If you're on a project that isn't disciplined about that, chances are they are undisciplined about so many other things the whole project is a mess that'll be gone in ten years anyway. I know so few projects that have survived more than fifteen years without calls for a "rewrite". Those few projects have been extremely disciplined about 50% of all effort is tech debt repayment, open source everything, and continuous modernization.

  • I don't think it's going away until ECMA supports native types. Until then it's the best game in town.

    If a team decides to move away from it, it's only few hours work to entirely remove. So even if it's going away, it's risk free until then.

    But I cannot imagine why any team would elect to remove Typescript without moving to something else similar. Unless it's just a personal preference by the developers who aren't willing to learn it. It removes so many issues and bugs. It makes refactoring possible again. I think teams that want to remove all types are nostalgic, like a woodworker who wants to use hand tools instead of power tools. It's perfectly fine, and for some jobs it's better. But it's not the most efficient use of a team to build a house.