Brave
I used to use Duck Duck Go, but it’s supposedly not as private as it claims to be, and my understanding is Brave is a bit better there.
I don’t use the Brave browser tho, just the search engine
I make things: electronics and software and music and stories and all sorts of other things.
Brave
I used to use Duck Duck Go, but it’s supposedly not as private as it claims to be, and my understanding is Brave is a bit better there.
I don’t use the Brave browser tho, just the search engine
I’m a relatively new hire and we just hired another person 2 weeks ago
It’s effort to switch, and we don’t benefit from having separate copies of the repo bc we’re so small. No one steps on eachother’s toes, so distributed version control isn’t necessary.
Now, the fact that most devs know git and SVN is dead is not lost on our CTO, but putting the effort to switch over doesn’t provide direct value to the customer, so I have to make the case that switching to git would do enough from a productivity and maintenance standard to effect customers.
Yes. We use SVN. I hate it. I’m trying to build a case to switch to git. We’re a small team, but a growing team
Epiphany is a neat little project, but my understanding is it has performance issues bc it can’t use the GPU or something, like YouTube videos load slow.
Here’s how I think it works
In formal language, what it means to accept a verification means does the result fall into the list of acceptable values.
Consider adding two 2-bit numbers:
The machine itself simply holds this automata and language, so all it does is take input and reject/accept end state. I think you’re just getting caught up in definitions
A sum of a list of numbers I think would be something like
Machines accept a valid state or hit an error state (accept/reject). The computation happens between the input and accept/reject.
But maybe I don’t understand it either. It’s been a while since I poked around at this stuff.
I didn’t know Go had interfaces. Neat
I can’t even wrap my mind around people who use 60% keyboards and use a bunch of extra function keys let alone anything more drastic
In VR, you are able to place windows anywhere. You have infinite amounts of screen. Look at something like Simula
Bc they’re about to release a VR headset PC that allows just that. It will likely inspire other companies to do so as well
Move to VR and infinite screen space. We’re so close. No doubt once Apple joins the fray it’ll be time
What I said:
You could mull over and discuss a million different ways to get started. The most important thing is to be decisive and just do
We could go on for hours debating what the best beginner language, environment, project, etc is, but the important thing is that they pick something and do it.
I gave them a specific thing to get started on. That’s the important thing.
Learning programming is gonna be hard. They’re gonna face issues no matter what, so like I said:
Is it the best way? Who cares just get started
That’s why I said you missed the point. I don’t think you read my reply at all and just stopped at the first word lol
Rust is renowned for being hard and frustrating to onboard onto. I don’t think this is a wise suggestion.
You missed the point
Pick Rust, learn Bevy, and make a Flappy Bird clone. Is it the best way? Who cares just get started.
You could mull over and discuss a million different ways to get started. The most important thing is to be decisive and just do
I need to get caught up on C#. I stopped using it just before C# 8
Thankfully, we migrated to git entirely right before I joined the company
Return to the office. Forced to use Windows again
Ubuntu Mono.
I think it has support for most special characters, but some of the weirder symbols aren’t there like a handful of IPA characters or emojis.
But you can always get backup fonts on your system just in case
Build a project. Learn how to do each step by searching the internet. It’s quite literally that easy.