I think Gutenberg was the biggest asshole in history. First, copyist priests never recovered from the printing machine. Second, it's allowed billions to get literate and learn things, leading to more discoveries, leading to more inventions, therefore more automation, therefore more unemployment. It's a miracle any of us has a job, truly.
We should also rollback on steam machine (and all that came after), to create employment in the farming industry
(Yes, I had this debate for Christmas, and it's still a sore point)
I was watching Midsommar with my girlfriend a while ago and some guys were on top of a large rock for the attestup xDD I was laughing because I knew what was gonna happen and she asked me and I explained and then exactly this happened and she was like wtf how do you know this
So hard to hit someone, much more likely that a car would hit me if I go on the road, considering the unwritten national competition on which city can take out the most cyclists
Going through the commit logs on a project. Last log is "Multiples modifications". I call out the guy who committed and tell him it isn't really informative. He then proceeds to stutter a 3 minutes long list of modifications he may or may have not done (this morning. He can't remember this morning). Sarcastically explain that by the end, I forgot the first items of the list. His answer "That's why 'Multiples modifications' is a fitting message"
He also added "Nothing wrong with the modifications. See, it got accepted". So "no conflicts = everything's good" apparently
@Nyakouai tell him, joke's on you, I'm gonna send a PR with 1289 changes on my last day for you to validate, "LOTS of modifications", then I'm leaving this mess to develop video games, Ciao!
> i hid a bug in the code. you have 23 hours to fix it or ontario will go back to the stone age. by the way, i'm off on holiday until i leave the company. tchüssi.
I am updating my app to Navigation Architecture Components and I see that it has a lag replacing fragments which is visible in the NavigationDrawer that does not close smoothly.
Until now, I was following this approach:
https://vikrammnit.wordpress.com/2016/03/28/facing-navigation-drawer-item-o...
But it is funny because when that happens here, it's the same thing. Except for some reason the engineering dept can still work, usually. At least I can
> This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill - the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill - you stay in Wonderland and I show you how deep the rabbit-hole goes.
Cause you want a ratio on 4. If I were to turn a math papers tho, the corrector would expect me to put 1/20. Fortunately, I'm not handing a math test ever again!
I have this recurring dream about once a month that I failed a fundamental highschool course, and they retroactively took my highschool diploma back, so I have to spend another semester in highschool
Highschool I didn't tbh, I actually just didn't do anything for the first 3 years, coasted 100%. Then in my last year (the one universities look at) I pulled my shit together to get that juicy 98% that got me my scholarship
University though, I cheated often
and for the record I have negative guilt about it
I wouldn't have done it any other way, really learned some good life lessons by cheating my way through
Nah I learned that there isn't a single path to any desired outcome and often times you can bend your morals/ethics to get what you want. Ends justifies the means, etc
Also I wasted way less of my time compared to other people, and in the end I only remember like 5-10% of what I was taught anyways, so I literally lost nothing
On the flip side though, every time you do it you risk getting caught and losing everything
Yeah, really depends on the courses.. I mostly did it for my physics ones
The computer engineering ones were really easy
But I think in the end it's just a different way of thinking.. Some people get a problem and they start in on it right away and try to work through it.. some people get a problem and they think about how they can get someone else to do it, some people get a problem and think about how they can avoid doing it, etc
I'm always in the camp of maximizing my output for the least amount of invested input
I once had an online chemistry class where the testing website for some reason just gave you all the answers. You'd think they'd wonder why the whole class got 100%.
@ballBreaker It always bothered me that professors were too lazy to make their classes realistic and they'd make you take a test on paper, because memorizing every method name in a programming language is what coding is all about.
@Mehdi It's funny because although he's academically dumb as a stump, he's incredibly smart in a lot of different areas.. a social engineer almost
(but I know you know that)
@twiz Yeah that always bothered me big time, I hated coding tests that were on paper.. in my final years I selected classes that just had final projects instead of final exams
@twiz Yeah that always bothered me big time, I hated coding tests that were on paper.. in my final years I selected classes that just had final projects instead of final exams
I just finished giving an exam for mips. I tell you what, I only prepared it two days ago. It's all about how well you can memorize stuff and tbh I feel guilt
@Chulo Consumers using API 19? Rare. But it is still used in products targeted for specific industries