Up until the last part I thought your point was going to be “but now we have class mobility”. Yeah, we don’t 😫 freedom is an illusion for the most part, but a convenient one
Rust dev, I enjoy reading and playing games, I also usually like to spend time with friends.
You can reach me on mastodon @sukhmel@mastodon.online or telegram @sukhmel@tg
Up until the last part I thought your point was going to be “but now we have class mobility”. Yeah, we don’t 😫 freedom is an illusion for the most part, but a convenient one
Especially when the “hybrid” model involves more days in office than at home.
Wdym “especially”, of course it does /s but not really
Well, Jackson before 2.9 did not differentiate, and although this was more than five years ago now, this is somewhat of a counter example
Also, you sound like serializers are not made by developers
That’s okay with me, but is there at least one meeting that requires me? Only having managers in the office could allow one to have an office ten times smaller, and no other people are needed there anyway (or live in a thousand miles radius from the office, since all the managers live in the costly city in the costly state, and the most of others are not even in the States)
Makes me think that with the hybrid they expect to have the best of both worlds, while in fact it will likely be the opposite.
Besides, with a mandatory fixed amount of days per quarter it gets soooo bullshit, it’s not hybrid it’s just barely glorified office work
I’m sure they don’t even understand that it was a discrimination, judging by the fact that they went on and left a lot of evidence of their stupidity
Except, if you use any library for deserialization of JSONs there is a chance that it will not distinguish between null and absent, and that will be absolutely standard compliant. This is also an issue with protobuf that inserts default values for plain types and enums. Those standards are just not fit too well for patching
This is the art level of fuckery, making it this bad was definitely harder than making it okay
You didn’t listen when we told you there’s malware in torrents, so we put malware in torrents
uBlock Origin is also not piracy, but it is the real way to block
Yeah, licenses like WTFPL highlight the difference between freedom for the user vs freedom for the developer.
I’m still not sure about which to consider the best license
Yeah, the propaganda machine is running full steam, and the worst thing is you never really know if something is said in good faith or by the bot account.
I heard that they employ a lot of different strategies, among the other goals it is to plant doubt, so even if something sounds half-reasonable it may still be part of the propaganda :(
What a better place the world could probably be if all this effort went into something good
I’d say it’s a matter of what are the chances of bad advice. If something people on the internet are talking about is widely known, there would also be papers with research, and I’m better off reading that. If it’s a niche stuff, their talk on the internet doesn’t bear statistical significance anyway.
Sure, there are scammers and incompetent doctors, but I would rather ask several people with a medical license, than several thousand laymen that think they are competent enough to give advices
Albeit talking face to face is only a necessary condition, it’s not enough for trusting the person to advise you
I’m glad you seem to at least have dealt off with the depression
Edit: now I think I have worded it wrong 😅 I meant that it’s good that you are not in depression now (well, hopefully)
To be fair, this is not correct, instead the last one should read “any kid who had rich parents”
Now I’m wondering what an egg boiled in kerosene or mineral oil would taste like 🤔
but maybe the exposure will be too short and it will cook regularly apart from the difference from a different boiling temperature
Skype used to store all history unencrypted for years after MS bought it, this seems to be a tradition of not caring enough
Nah, I meant that workers really don’t have freedom, but we are led to believe that we do have it, because it’s convenient for the rich