dirty onanists spilling their seed
dirty onanists spilling their seed
we all know it was a 720
I wouldn’t go back, if I were you.
I always enjoy hearing about other people’s bugs. It makes my imposter syndrome recede for a few moments.
I hate to say it, but you’re right. I really wish Western countries would try tho.
The higher up I go, the more I ask why. And the more often “eh, I guess next release will be fine” is the answer.
This is a great summary.
I can’t decide if I’d rather be a nerd or a geek. Maybe I’m a neek? Or a gerd?
“There’s no way to tell just by looking at them whether eclipse glasses are genuinely safe,” Fienberg said, “but it’s easy to tell if they are not safe.”
Try on the glasses indoors first. Nothing should be visible through the lenses, and even the brightest lights should only appear very faintly. If furnishings or wall decor are visible through the lenses, these glasses aren’t safe to view the sun.
But if the glasses pass the indoor test, the AAS recommends putting them on outside during a sunny day and looking around. Again, nothing should be visible through the lenses, unless the sun is reflecting off an exceptionally shiny surface, and even then the light will appear faint if the glasses are safe.
If the glasses pass that second test, try looking at the sun through them for less than a second. If the glasses are safe, the sun will appear comfortably bright and likely white, yellow, orange or bluish white.
This one makes the most sense, and has the fewest failure modes.
Front end is hard. Slapping together some form elements, xhr requests, and DOM updates is easy. Building a usable, consistent UI, that makes proper user of the backend isn’t. On top of that, every jackass thinks they get it because they’re a user, so you get unsolicited suggestions from everywhere.
Source: front end devs sobbing in the cubicle next to me.
Woah woah WOAH WOAH.
So you’re saying software for the Artemis landers aren’t being built with the latest TypeScript compiler and running on a canary version of v8?!
I feel like modern compilers would turn their nose up at that shit. “Dead code? Ewww! No way I’m letting that into my syntax tree!”
Some sort of JSON-but-binary format getting built into browser APIs would be great.
Hmmm. I didn’t see docs on adding my own colourizing rules.
Are they that starved for attention or approval or something ?
yes. It feels good to be acknowledged and validated.
there should be a warning on the bottle
What is spilled cannot die