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7:10 AM
Good morning.
I wrote a decent answer on SoftwareEngineering.SE that's currebntly at 98 votes and I'm so close that that second meaningless gold badge.
@Hozuki To be fair, they have a much stronger case against Apple (and I'm not being biased here :)), since Google, quite fairly, said that Epic is welcome to distribute the game independently of the Play Store. Being on the Play Store is an advantage, sure, but not mandatory - as you can see with custom app stores by Amazon and others show. Google can make a case that their surcharge is payment for a service, not a gatekeeping tax.
Apple will have a much harder time making that claim, seeing as they actively block any non-AppStore installations, requiring jailbreaking which invalidates warranty.
99! One vote away from a Meaningless Internet Badger!
 
7:37 AM
Enjoy your gold badge
You're welcome
 
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Yeah. I have no issues with Google since alternative stores are a thing. I think their marketing is shit, though, 'cuz Google's communications essentially brainwash all common users into thinking that Google Play is the ONLY way to get apps and the rest is malware. They always refer to everything as 'untrusted' etc. That'll probably be a point of attention against Google. But Apple can go suck it.
 
Woohoo!
@Hozuki Yup. At some point the EU is going to start forcing Android manufacturers to proactively offer a selection of app stores, like it does for browsers on Windows.
They'll still pick the PlayStore because it really is the most comprehensive, but it will help inform the userbase that it's still a choice.
 
Yeah, exactly. And that's fine. Alternative stores aren't necessarily malware stores, they need to make that clear and make the choice easier, then Android is totally fine.
Apple on the other hand... I hope they lose. I don't like Epic at all, this is just a billion dollar company fighting another one for more money, but Apple's practices receive malcontent from every dev and change is sorely necessary there. If Epic can start that, fine with me.
 
Apple, though, are going to be in a pickle. They're going to lose a lot of money in China because of the whole TikTok issue and Trump's trade war on Chinese mobile developers, so they're going to have to bend for the EU in order not to lose a lot of business there as well.
I wouldn't be surprised if Epic (and Chinese Tencent, one of its owners) chose this time to make this stand because Apple is vulnerable.
 
 
2 hours later…
AAA
9:52 AM
What is the next best thing to WebClient if I need to run some code when the API returns a 429 http status code?
 
Don't make requests for a bit
 
The problem might be with WebClient, which is an old and not very flexible class. Use HttpClient, check the returned status code, and call your code.
IIRC, WebClient either downloads the data or throws an exception, at which point you have to dig into the relevant exception to check the HTTP status code.
With HttpClient you can do a simpler var response = await client.GetAsync(...); if (response.StatusCode == HttpStatusCode.429TooManyRequests) { whatever}
 
10:28 AM
If you want to make waiting a bit and retrying easy you could try Polly too
 
ahoy mateys o/
 
Yo
Ah bollocks
 
10:53 AM
Just before I abandoned the C# world I had this whole big blog post planned about how Polly (or policy-based libraries in general) are the next step in evolution for languages like C#.
 
11:09 AM
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That's what we said about contract-based programming too, but that hasn't happened either
 
True, but I have a whole historical analysis thing about it.
I'm not saying it will be, just that it's the logical evolutionary step after exceptions, generators/iterators and async/await
I wonder where my draft for it is hiding, though.
Ah, there it is. "Exceptions and Lambdas and Async, Oh My! or: The Search For More Code Locality"
Now all I need to do is have the time, energy and mental acuity to actually write it. And the other, non-technical blog posts sitting in my drafts folder. And to read more. And any of the other things in my progressively growing to-do pile.
 
11:25 AM
Then do it!
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Or make a video instead of that's easier
 
Is it, though?
No, it isn't.
I've been recording a podcast lately, and I've seen how much work editing is.
And that's just with audio./
(To be fair, though, I'm not the one editing. One of my co-podcasters is)
 
I think it's easier, honestly. Writing requires very precise wording to efficiently communicate what you're trying to get across, while I feel it's far easier to get the point across talking a little more.
Editing.. takes a little time, yes, but I'd say, far less than writing a high quality blog post.
 
I enjoy writing, though I also enjoy talking and lecturing. However, since I personally tend to grok technical matters much better from text than from video, I might be biased about the efficacy of taking this sort of topic and doing it in video.
One thing for sure, it will take a long time because I have a lot to learn about video lectures - learning how to show code/screenshots while talking, both as part of a live talk and in an edited one.
I have a live talk scheduled for October that I really need to prepare, to research it, then write it, then think about how to deliver it.
 
Oh yeah, I get that. I did do a recording on considering of choosing a CDN vs local hosting js/css assets and I just winged it. I know the material, and it's just far easier to talk about it than write it down. That's personal of course.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan Right, just do it a bunch of times I'd say. Make some videos w/ editing. It'll become easier to get it right in one go (for live)
 
Oh, I can probably do a fair-enough straight up "I'm just gonna talk about X", but since people are actually paying for the one in October (not directly to me, and I don't get paid, but they still pay admission to the fan-run volunteer-based con), I want to do it well.
I've already started thinking about using OBS to stream my feed + a live screencast together.
For the fan talk, I'll probably want about 75% me and 25% screen. For a technical talk, maybe the other way around.
 
11:33 AM
Oh yeah OBS (or Streamlabs OBS) works very well for all of this.
 
Streamlabs is Windows only, I see. The advantage of OBS is I can use it on the work Linux or the home Windows without learning different things.
 
Ohh, did not know that. The Streamlabs extra features aren't that interesting to you anyway
 
Seems they're a premium product on top of the OBS Project, which means they're probably more streamlined to use than OBS Studio itself, but if I already figured out the basic steps to stream a webcam + a window in OBS Studio, I think I'll manage.
 
Yeah it's just fluff on top.
 
12:02 PM
Just bought some new ram
my PC desperately needed some less shit ram
 
 
4 hours later…
3:51 PM
Ugh. To install OBS Studio on linux I can either use the standard Debian repository (which has an older version, because Debian are stability freaks) or use the Snappy install, which is an isolated installation you can't easily add plugins to. Ugh.
 
 
3 hours later…
 
2 hours later…
8:21 PM
nop
 
mr5
9:03 PM
looks fun. I think I'm gonna buy it.
 
Looks like fun, seems it'll get boring real quick.
 
mr5
h8rs
 
9:26 PM
oh my.... question time
say I have a complex object like Quiz with some properties including List<Question> and QUestion would have some properties and List<Answer> and answer have some properties too... how would you go about building that from the UX point of view and is there a neat way to go about this?
 
10:09 PM
is there anyway i can sniff a running DLL for exceptions?
i suspect there are some in a production app - and i dont want to change any code and deploy it.
how can i see those exceptions, if they are happening... ?
 

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