That’s why we need to negotiate in block, likely through unions.
That’s why we need to negotiate in block, likely through unions.
Damn, those copyleft extremists!
You can make solutions popular with a shit ton of money. Doesn’t necessarily make them good solutions.
There’s https://redbean.dev/, but it’s not quite what you mean.
It runs on the browser with a local host reference to a lua server with access to c libs.
Javascript has airbnb style guide, enforceable through eslint. There’s also react related eslint extensions to give you a lot of best practices to follow.
There’s also prettier, which is just about formatting.
They’re better off for life if you donate the money you’d spend with yt once for each, once per month. Many will have their turns.
Paying for Netflix isn’t fine either.
Why not contribute to the upstream?
Yes, I understand! I’m talking from the perspective of someone that learned those skills.
That learned about tool chains, about the required infrastructure, the processes, IDE configuration, etc.
I’m not saying the change is painless. I’m saying for each of those, there’s an equivalent in any other game making tool. The foundations help to learn the new ones faster. And the new ones takes you generalised knowledge further. Which only contributes to your professionals growth.
At the end of the day, every technology will be replaced. Being able to transfer skills between different scenarios is a valuable skill itself. :)
Don’t forget those skills are transferable!
Streams of events, object manipulation and shit is used everywhere. Just a few minor concept changes, just like from one company to another.
I’m speaking in abstract because it never happened to me.
But stuff like this, I suppose: https://www.businessinsider.com/how-bosses-use-employee-tracking-software-for-remote-workers-2023-8?op=1
And then actively using/reviewing these to create competition between people, and/or change how people choose to work.
I kind of get the passive use, and the extreme cases, where people are not delivering and then you find they are not actually working, in retrospect.
Active remote surveillance, no one?
Makes one question what should money be allowed to buy, doesn’t it?
Just like ARM based chips? From low power to main chips?
Worth mentioning that RISC-V is open source and anyone with the means is allowed to distribute it royalty free.
Dadinho é o caralho, meu nome agora é Zé Pequeno, porra!
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I think failed estimated dates just highlight how much we don’t know about ourselves, our systems and our own knowledge.
It is the abyss of the unknown talking back to us. We have the privilege of having the stuff we don’t know thrown back at us to prove us wrong. And we often fail to be humbled by it.
Most technology, programming languages and frameworks feel just the same, in a professional environment. Majority of web and apps is so simple that literally anything will do. Simple api consumption, simple database crud stuff. The tech stack doesn’t matter that much.
Agree, extravagant bonuses need to be paid to all those executives, shareholders, investors, and music producers so that they can continue pushing their pet artist everywhere, and can continue employing the engineering teams that will keep quiet and keep pumping out that sweet sweet code.
We need those people to control everything we hold valuable, otherwise everything would be chaos! Therefore they are supposed to milk us on all of our online actions, our personal devices, etc. We owe them so much!
/s
Read the official rust book until you feel like want to experiment with something, then go to advent of code and try something, anything out.
Then start investigating why it doesn’t quite work. And I guess gpt for suggestions and random questions isn’t a bad idea.