Please stop trying to explain it to me.
I never understand people rejecting free feedback on social media posts.
Please stop trying to explain it to me.
I never understand people rejecting free feedback on social media posts.


Too many comments here taking it seriously…


Not if it’s for oil based paints.


An engine exploded when they were taking off, still on the runway but too late to abort.
Just use whatever method works for you, and tell them how often you floss, but not what method you’re using. Or lie, as long as it works that’s all that matters. Or find a different dentist, I’ve had several dentists and none of them have been that picky.


Lots of Trump supporters are happy to admit they don’t like him as a person (he’s not “churchy”) but they like what he’s doing (supporting Christian nationalism).
That implies they are aware that remote teams can be managed more efficiently, but that they lack the ability. I don’t think that’s true, most managers don’t seem to have that self-awareness.
That’s what they said - managers feel like remote teams are harder to manage. Doesn’t matter if that’s actually true.


While true, those companies all have solid revenue streams that aren’t directly related to AI. If a bubble pops they’ll all suffer, but all of them were profitable before the AI boom and can survive without it. It’s very different from the dot bubble because that was driven by speculation and many companies weren’t making any profit back then.


Did you know you can be exposed to other cultures without leaving the country? You did a good job of pointing out why travel alone doesn’t make people more open minded, but you didn’t touch on the opportunities Americans have to connect with other cultures without leaving their own country.
But the same side as the gadsden flag… Maybe someone’s ideas of the horseshoe theory?
US bad, California good. UK bad, UK also good. Biden good, also thin blue line and gadsden flag good. Isreal good, also Palestine good.
Very high latency, though. Great for some use cases, useless for others.


Ruby is brittle, and if your hotend crashes into the bed due to bad settings, broken ABL, etc it might break. That’s just based on what I read when I was considering buying one, I don’t have any first hand experience.
Even without monitoring, it probably has a unique IP/subnet that shows the traffic came from the ISS. And the financial institution is definitely recording IPs.
It wasn’t named by IT people, though. It was named by academics. And it’s not about using computers, it’s about computing. Computer science is older than digital electronics.


You aren’t going to find that in every industry/career. Not sure what other advice I can give, but if I was in that situation I’d be looking for a career/field that uses a similar set of skills but has a better culture.


Besides RAM, what resources do you think you’re saving? Not CPU cycles or IO ops, because you’re processing the same amount of DB queries either way. Not power consumption, since that isn’t affected by RAM utilization. Maybe disc space? But that’s even cheaper than RAM.
Or more importantly: the extent to which you can self-host out of sheer luck and ignorance like you suggest is very limited. If you don’t want to engage with a minimum amount of configuration, you might bump into security issues (a much broader and complex subject) long before any of the above has a material impact.
You’re mischaracterizing what I said. My point is that running multiple DB processes on a server isn’t going to have a significant impact on system load, if all other factor are kept constant.
Birds aren’t real.