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Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Well, I hope they have insurance.

    Thanks, I'll see myself out.

  • According to the alleged recipients themselves,

    I don't see these people, especially after the context in the video, as reliable sources. I remain skeptical about these calls. Don't get me wrong, PP sucks, but Rachel should have done a little more "fact-checking"

  • Do you think Carney will allow Germany to trade theirs for draft picks later?

  • Yeah, unfortunately that stuff is almost impossible to estimate. Inform your client that fixing the build will be a game of whack-a-mole where you'll fix one thing and 5 new errors will show up. I would give yourself lots of time since you've never worked on Maui (? You didn't say that in your post but if you've never heard of xamarin, i'll assume maui is new).

    I would break your work down into two milestones: a) compile and run, b) fix all the busted views. It should come to no surprise that a) will be hard to estimate so give yourself lots of time, and b) will be easier to estimate because you'll be able to review each View and determine what kind of fixes you need to make.

    Good luck

  • Yes. The transition from Xamarin to Maui has been similar to transition from .net framework to .net core.

    A few things you will run into:

    • namespaces have changed
    • certain things will be deprecated but still currently work (ie FillAndExpand)
    • platform specific setup has changed (you'll need to convert to the new way, but code will likely remain the same)
    • upgrade your nuget packages to the Maui equivalents (the ones we used had Maui versions so we didn't have to change any of them)
    • certain ways of doing things have change slightly, like how to run things on the main UI thread (you'll see warnings)
    • your xaml code will remain mostly unchanged but your layout may need to be fixed (especially if your dependencies changed their interfaces)

    That's all I can think of right now. There's no easy way to do it and it's going to suck. Focus on getting it to build with all your dependencies upgraded and then go from there.

  • You will speak the version that you learned. You will mostly notice regional differences in the idioms and synonyms of the words you know might be used more commonly in one region vs the other.

    For example, in London you might hear people use boot instead of trunk.

    But the majority of the words will be the same regardless of region.

  • That means one of the options could be Trump's resignation. Right? Right?

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • "Copilot I'm losing this match, aim for me"

  • Kind of a nothing burger.

    These repositories, belonging to more than 16,000 organizations, were originally posted to GitHub as public, but were later set to private, often after the developers responsible realized they contained authentication credentials allowing unauthorized access or other types of confidential data. Even months later, however, the private pages remain available in their entirety through Copilot.

    The repo was listed as public and archived. It's not clear from the article but I suspect that the "private" information is just a copy of what was made public and not the information added after it was made private.

  • I thought of Crysis also when I read the title. But first, I'm down for Quake and more specifically QuakeTF (team fortress). I spent way too much of my youth playing quake and qtf (honorable mention to UTF).

  • Tux Guitar comes to mind but some things like chord diagrams isn't done as well as guitar pro (imo).

    For chord diagrams (like at the top of GP), there's hundreds of websites out there which show those and its probably quicker to just use those. I'll usually just search "C chord

    <instrument>

    ".

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Ottawa force un retour au travail temporaire à Postes Canada

  • He did get to know a few holelings, and they were very close to his heart.

  • So why would Valve do this? It may be a response to several law firms’ attempt to file “mass arbitrations,” wherein “hundreds or thousands of consumers bringing individual arbitration claims against the same company at the same time and over the same issue,” according to ClassAction.org. It’s essentially a loophole for class action waivers and arbitration clauses, though it still won’t end up in court.

    Hit em right in the pocket book.

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Le 25 septembre : une journée de célébrations pour les Franco-Ontariens

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Le Québec est-il un traître aux minorités francophones du Canada? (english in comments)

    Canada @lemmy.ca

    Canada’s Leaders Must Reject Overbroad Age Verification Bill

  • The answer depends on the country. In the US, review the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering (AML) regulations. In Canada, there is the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA) regulations and also the CRA requiring the individuals and businesses retain their records for up to six years.

    if there’s some sort of way around this either with a lawyer or federal form or something.

    Very unlikely.

  • #FF00FF

    In terms of physiology, the color is stimulated in the brain when the eye reports input from short wave blue cone cells along with a sub-sensitivity of the long wave cones which respond secondarily to that same deep blue color, but with little or no input from the middle wave cones. The brain interprets that combination as some hue of magenta or purple, depending on the relative strengths of the cone responses.

    In other words, our brains are like "🤷‍♂️, here's a thing"

  • Terminal is life!

    But also, easy mode Linux distro for the technically challenged would be great

  • Windows 98 -> Slackware dual boot (with big ol' red grub screen) -> windows up to win 10 -> debian(laptop) win10 (pc)

    Gonna try getting a new m.2 drive and dual booting soon to test playing the games I like on Linux. If all goes well, I'll be moving away from windows

  • Man visits childhood home to reconcile with himself after being forced to harm coworkers.

  • Canada @lemmy.ca

    Bill C-18 Bailout: Government Announces Plans to Pay For 35% of Journalist Costs for News Outlets as It More Than Doubles Tax Credit Per Employee

    Programmer Humor @programming.dev

    Password requirements are getting out of hand