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808
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • That's what radiation + chemotherapy does too. The whole goal is for the treatment to kill the cancer faster than it kills the human.

  • I'm not actually in IT in my org but I remember one they sent out was "FWD: Your Medicare Benefits Package is Maturing" followed a few days later by an actual company wide shame email from the CIO about the click rate.

    Yeah... boomer companies.

  • Expectation: "Oh my God. They're hacking the system! Deploy counter measures!!! furious typing"

    Reality: "So, we sent out a phishing test email and had a 61% click rate..."

  • GREAT bait post! I look forward to the coming slugfest.

  • Cringe watermark

  • But where are the walls?

  • Bro are you seriously comparing using a vendor locked web browser to being stoned for being gay in a conservative religious country 🤣🤣🤣

  • Yes, if you're cleaning your build plate regularly you'll probably not need the glue. I've had to do it once for a very weird part that was wide but with a small cross section though, and if the environment is cool it can and still will want to peel away from the plate.

  • Maybe. I haven't kept up on every software so I don't remember that controversy. but a lot of software bundles adware/crap in their installers still.... Just be vigilant as always.

  • Huh. Did a little reading and it honestly does sound pretty useful. I'm not crazy about the corporate sponsorship of the consortium but there's a lot of open source licensing to promote adoption so it's not all bad. Neat. I could get behind doing a couple little custom home automation projects using that kind of network.

  • Still working... for now. Won't take very long for the rest to evaporate if the Ford CEO keeps her head as far up her ass as it has been.

  • You will use your corporate vendor lock-in garbage software and you will LIKE IT! THATS AN ORDER!!

    I don't really care what happens on my work machine tbh. I'll use whatever they set to default.

  • Well, he was definitely stroking something.

  • So, classic corporate walk-back. Put something out that's horrible, get backlash, walk it back to what you originally wanted to do which is "less horrible", then make people feel good cause they feel like they won while you're still laughing to the bank.

    Fuck unity, let them rot.

  • Well he asked about deca and hectometers, which are all larger-than meters.

    But the same kind of rules apply below the decimal point as above it. We have millimeters (0.001 extreme precision), centimeters (0.01 high precision), and meters (1 low-ish precision). Decimeters (0.1) exist but are rarely used since both meters and centimeters can get the same result. Micro meters and nanometers are also used more frequently, but it becomes industry specific when actually doing things that small.

  • What is the perceived problem, then? 99% of sites these days are all built with kits that support Firefox just as well as Chromium, the dev choice to not support or intentionally lock out Firefox is either just laziness (not wanting to deal with any potential problems or not given enough time to run full Firefox user tests) or incentive driven (middle manager has word from high manager that they can't support firefox because highest manager makes bank from Chromium).

    The technical limitation isn't actually there in the modern web, it's almost always a manufactured limitation. I think I've only ever encountered a single website that didn't actually technically work on Firefox, and that was Weather Underground. Which they ended up fixing after 3 months or so.

  • that's your own fault for using teams though

    also they don't count since Microsoft changes all links to force open in Edge and there's nothing you can do about it.

  • changes useragent to Chrome. Everything works perfectly on the site

    Hmm. Interesting.

  • Well just don't ask a Pentium processor for it either....