Or you put on a disguise and ask for the key to the room so we can check it to see if it’s been compromised by BaDAcToRs.
Or you put on a disguise and ask for the key to the room so we can check it to see if it’s been compromised by BaDAcToRs.
PR reviews take the most time, eliminating those saved us loads of time.
QA were also bogging us down, axed them too. Now we’re flying.
The Social Security Infrastructure rebuild should be done in a matter of weeks! At least that’s what Copilot says.
Be a man.
‘git commit -am “changes”’
Mobile app users get annoyed if you push too many updates. So you gotta pace yourself.
I completely agree. Not mentioned in my spiel is the constant human QA effort, each ticket merged gets checked, releases get a week of testing before release to the public.
Also, yeah. I’m iOS frontend. I make pixels dance. Either I leave security to Keychain or I hope (read: confirm) backend is sanitising inputs.
Rogue-like: Randomly generated levels, high difficulty, ‘run’ based with very limited continuity between runs. (Generally, items and resources gained on a run are lost when the run ends, usually there is an exception that lets you improve some aspect of your character for the next run)
Deckbuilder: Actions, movement and/or abilities are controlled by randomly drawing power cards from a deck. Spent cards are move to a discard pile. When your draw pile is empty, shuffle the discard pile and move it to the draw pile.
During the game, cards can be added and removed from the deck, allowing the player to tune their decks for a desired playstyle.
Small PR are easy to review and parse. Work gets broken down in to small, shippable changes. If you couple that with feature flags, you can get to a point where shipping a release is as easy as building whatever the latest commit is on Main and pushing it out the door.
Automate that, do it every week or two.
Tell me you commit your dependencies without telling me you commit your dependencies.
I got that far into the OP and thought, “Yeah, nah. Not a failure.” Then the rest of the post went up from there.
Gfs parents are fuckheads, probably put a ton of pressure on their daughter to be perfect all the time. That’s the kind of upbringing that traumatises people. (Conjecture on my part)
The fact the internet actually works at all is nuts.
As I understand it, Bruce already spends a lot of money helping Gotham, but the city is so corrupt it’s slow going.
Like any newb, the nuance is lost.
Data types don’t matter, the interface matters.
I don’t even know nothing about the customization. I just create a page and dump links, pictures and some typing in there.
But yes! Small, incremental change!
For digital rabbit holes, something like Notion helps a lot. I have one page per interest and I collect learnings and links related to the topic in there. Similarly to the physical buckets, they are all in one space so you can have a quick look at refresh your memory and pick up where you left off.
I’ve stopped giving myself a hard time for having wandering interests and not finishing anything.
I try to look at it more as I’m having fun researching and implementing things, that’s what hobbies are for.
Trying to force myself to finish things really sucked the fun out of them. Now I have literal and figurative buckets for each project so I can easily put down and pick up projects.
I find myself moving between fewer projects and putting more effort into them than I would have before.
I do keep some buckets closer than others, so I’m more likely to pick those up when I have free time;
Drawing
Designing fidget toys
Electronics project C
HL3 soon after. 5real this time guise.
And the George Martin will finish A Song of Ice and Fire.
It uses proprietary, disposable, non-rechargeable batteries with drm built in. $60 for 4 hours playtime.
/s?
Even ignoring the other major characters, interacting with any standard enemy shatters their hard and hostile exterior and releases the cute and fuzzy little goober inside.
Just buy a good 3d printer for your first. Sure, it’ll cost money, but the heartache of constant troubleshooting and tweaking can just suck the fun out of the hobby if you just need this print to succeed.
Prusa Mini+ (I think) Bambu A1 Mini (this would be my #1 starter printer before the security updates they done)
Write down your current minimum, stick to it. You can review after a few days if there’s no interest.
Be up front, show pictures of flaws or damage on the items.
Respect people’s time. Keep the listing up to date. Try to learn from failed interactions and update the listing accordingly.
Have an idea of how the item is getting to the buyer and how much that would cost. Prefer to meet in person in a well trafficked area when others will be around and there are cameras nearby that you can rely on in case of robbery. Inside a Starbucks, for example. If someone is resistant to meeting in a public place, reconsider doing business with them.
Cash is king. Everything else can be clawed back if they scream “fraud!” Having flaws on the listing will give you a lot of power when someone tries to get the money back.