My 2001 Landcruiser with over 1,000,000 kms on the clock had a solid front axle and never did anything like a death wobble. For that matter, nor did our ‘96 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Maybe the longer wheelbase helped
My 2001 Landcruiser with over 1,000,000 kms on the clock had a solid front axle and never did anything like a death wobble. For that matter, nor did our ‘96 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Maybe the longer wheelbase helped
Yeah, I’d say Kitty and Alacritty work pretty well on Linux. Makes this comparison table seem like bs
I suggest posting this to the rust forum, they’ve been super helpful to me
Ah right, thank you, I missed that somehow
I wonder how much this will affect the power usage during boot on my laptop with its integrated AMDGPU. Granted, boot time is fairly short so hopefully this won’t really matter.
Until the CIA “helps” Mexico with the left wing “problem”
The prompts to upgrade Office 365 every time my gaming PC updates really hurts after using a Linux machine all day
I’m tempted to publish an NPM package to do so as a joke, but I fear that it’d get used seriously
However it should be noted that the remote development connection is via their servers, which makes it somewhat less useful
Ah ok, the name implies it’s a security guard
I love that you’re thinking about how to secure sensitive parts of JS applications, however I wonder what threat this is guarding against. Can you give an example? Surely if an attacker can modify the source to call the sensitive functions, then they could modify the allow list
Oh wow, this is amazing info. Thanks!
Nice article! I’m a fan of the “don’t optimise early” mantra, which seems particularly relevant here regarding clone
I feel like this is a perfect encapsulation of how an experienced self-aware developer thinks. Experience really beats the hard stances out of you. I find myself saying “it depends” and “a bit of column A, bit of column B” often, like a cheap kids toy
His take strangely acknowledges that defects are caused by programmers, yet doesn’t want to improve the tools we use to help us not make these mistakes. In summary, git gud.
Experience has taught me that I’m awfully good at finding and firing foot guns, and when I use a language that has fewer foot guns along with good linting, I write reliable code because I tend to focus on what I want the code to do, not how to get there.
Declarative functional programming suits me down to the ground. OOP has been friendly to me, mostly, but it also has been the hardest to understand when I come back to it. Experience has given me an almost irrational aversion to side effects, and my simple mind considers class members as side effects
I guess a porch pirate isn’t gonna look in the bin, and if they did, it does look like recycling
So I guess that’s something?
Yeah, this is my colleagues waiting for me, poor bastards
D) spend millions developing an AI to generate the boilerplate generator badly