someone watching you code in a google doc
I’ve had nightmares less terrifying than this
A little insane, but in a good way.
someone watching you code in a google doc
I’ve had nightmares less terrifying than this
Wow, an actually good summary of what the problem is with Reddit
Made the switch 4 years ago. No regrets.
First, thank you for the detailed response.
Second, I think you finally convinced me to delete my FB. I will link to this comment wherever possible to show people what a terrible company Meta is.
Can you tell us more about what they are like?
3.5 is also really good, but I’ve been using GPT-4 for almost everything since it became available. 3.5 hallucinates more often but I used it a lot before April, and I was really satisfied with it.
This is an excellent explanation of hashing, and the interactive animations make it very enjoyable and easy to follow.
I’m sure it’s a nice client but I don’t understand why so many GUI projects have no screenshots in their READMEs. It would be great if I could immediately see if I like it without installing it.
EDIT: thanks for adding the screenshot to your post! It looks awesome!
Well, there’s this place:
My new community got quite a few subscribers from there. Just make sure to post relative links using both the Lemmy and kbin routes (/c/
and /m/
).
EDIT: oh, I almost forgot, there actually is a site for community discovery: Lemmy Browser. I don’t think it currently lists kbin communities but we could ask them to (or if it’s open source, someone could implement it).
This is pretty awesome and it shows how far .NET has come in recent years.
Yes, I’ve also experienced this. I called it “reminder inflation” but alarm fatigue is a much better term!
Due for the iPhone is excellent. It’s a reminder app that nags you every five minutes until you get The Thing™ done. Before I started using it, I had a problem with forgetting reminders once they appeared. This never happens anymore and I actually manage to get some things done!
You’re right, they also have to prove their counterarguments, and those who don’t do it are often bad programmers. But I’ve also experienced the same with some actually brilliant people.
That may be part of it but I’ve also observed it among fellow programmers.
You give your opinion about something and your coworker has a smug, arrogant knee-jerk reaction based on some cargo-cult belief without actually thinking about the details of the problem. Then you need to walk them through why what you said is not what they meant step-by-step, and while it may be wrong it is still a valid opinion. If you succeed, they completely change and become cooperative, and you can have an actually useful discussion. But you have to be super patient, like when taming an irritated feral cat that wants to scratch you. If you’re good, the cat becomes cuddly and cute.
This works but I’m extremely tired of having to perform this dance with 60% of the new coders I meet.
It definitely helps me. It isn’t perfect, but it’s a night and day difference