Doesn't matter if you win or lose, insider trading (illegal kind) is when someone with access to material non-public information, trades based on that info. I believe all publicly traded companies must have policies in place, so that any employees with access to this type of info have trading restrictions. In general, if they want to sell, they need to inform an internal compliance team, and then there may be mandatory waiting periods. For example, they may only be able to sell after 30 day waiting period.
SO has helped me countless times, so I can't thank it enough. However, it just seems impossible to become an "expert" these days. I can't even vote when a solution has helped me. I've tried raising my own legitimate questions, but at this point they're going to be obscure & niche, so that no one interacts with it, and I don't get magical internet points so that I can contribute myself. It's actually really frustrating since I've actually wanted to give back to the community, and it just seems to work actively against me.
Working at a company with no automated tests. There's not even a collection of regression tests or anything to follow. I was wondering if anyone could share or point me towards a good template to start building out test cases as a first step?
This restaurant in Argentina. Didn't even go there for the burger. Wasn't sure what to get on the menu. Place was on the "at least where a collar" type with low lighting and cocktails and all that. Type of place you'd usually eat with fork and knife.
Anyways, I saw they had a burger on the menu and the ingredients just sounded good. Nothing far out there or anything, but it gave me the craving. When it finally came out, the first bite was so. Fucking. Good. Meat in general has a very high floor in Argentina, but that burger was something else. My wife agrees that was the best burger we've ever tried as well.
We went back to Argentina about a year after we had had that burger. About a month in, I surprised my wife with a reservation at the restaurant. We had been talking about getting that burger again for weeks before coming to Argentina. We get to the place, order a drink, and pick up the menu. For about 2 minutes the table was silent. Then we started looking at each other quizzically. "Do you see the burger?", I asked. She shakes her head. We signal to the waiter that we have a Q. He comes over and we ask him about the burger. "Ah, I'm sorry, the chef took it off the menu a couple of months ago. I guess not enough people were ordering it.". Man, both our hearts sank.
TLDR; life is unfair. The best burgers can only be eaten once.
The sad thing is that people would pay if it just wasn't so frustrating. I remember coming home from a NYE 10yrs ago or so, and had made up my mind to watch the latest season of Vikings. I was ready to pay for it, and there literally was no legal way for me to get it. So I sailed the high seas.
The frustrating part is that I have DAZN, but because they don't have rights to all the competitions I'm interested in, I still have to pirate to watch them. If I had a menu and could choose competitions and even buy one-off games at-will (at a reasonable price), I wouldn't resort to pirating at all for sports.
Single hot moms?