But did the front fell off?
But did the front fell off?
Great advice. I would add to it just to learn leveraging those tools effectively. They are great productivity boost. Another side effect once they become popular is that some skills that we already have will be harder to learn so they might be in higher demand.
Anyway, make sure you put aside enough money to not have to worry about such things 😃
Exactly what you’re looking for.
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The difference is they retracted the statement. Never heard of such a thing under Trump…
A fine example of whataboutism. We are talking about Russia not the USA.
Yes it was. Look at what they did to Chechnya. Was that Americans fault too?
Yeah the Russian invasion before didn’t help either.
By accepting countries that really wanted out from the genocidal boot of Russians? Yes.
I agree, I am certain that there are thousands of great and passionate about FOSS people there. I’m just not that certain about IBM ;) It’s still probably better place to work at than most.
All in all, I am only saying that the fact that somebody cites “personal reasons” doesn’t mean there are no other factors at play.
You shouldn’t burn bridges when leaving even the shittiest employer. So personal reasons it is. We will never know what the truth is ;)
It’s not about corporate instances. It’s the bots and fake accounts/posts/comments. That’s one of the issues with Reddit. There are little authentic posts. Most of them are advertisements it just reposts to farm karma to avoid detection. It’s ridiculous.
Not only that, but the community is small enough that large corporations and marketing companies don’t care about it. Yet ;)
Hallelujah!
Yeah Russia should let their people go…
and I mostly work on my own projects
Then your opinion is absolutely understandable.
It’s also frustrating b/c types don’t guarantee that the system does-the-thing, only that the type-system and compiler are happy, so it’s like pleasing the wrong boss, or some metaphor like that.
Types help you refactoring and communicating with other team members about expected inputs/outputs. Did you ever try debugging a number that should’ve been a string in a codebase that you didn’t write? Example from today: jsforce will throw an exception when you pass a number instead of string due to the fact that the Salesforce server will complain that the type is incorrect. If the method had correct typing of “string”, it would save me a few hours of debugging a huge library without visibility inside of it…
Have you heard about our lord and savior, TypeScript?
Nix is amazing. I’m using nix btw 🤣 on my steam deck 😃