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Funny; that’s where my mind went too.
TV equivalent of OpenWRT?
Funny; that’s where my mind went too.
TV equivalent of OpenWRT?
He’s already investigated himself and found that Xitter is a bastion of freedom. Same goes for Truth Social.
Shoot. I know a lot of good people who worked there. This gums up more than just CISA’s primary role; they also did a great job of managing international threat intel, and these changes are likely to cause a lot of organizations to no longer trust them with that data.
In reality, coding is something you can learn on your own… or not. Colleges are good for teaching computing science and architectural design, but the good ones will assume you already know how to code. The problem of course, is that when you graduate you are unlikely to find a job as a computer scientist or software architect, and will most likely need to spend 5+ years as a junior programmer first.
Namanyay, I’m sorry to say, sounds like a relative newbie when it comes to software development. The refrain “junior software developers can’t actually code” has been around as long as software development.
I remember when Stack Exchange first popped up, senior developers complained “junior developers don’t actually LEARN anything anymore; they just copy code off of Stack Exchange without understanding what it does!”
And before SE? We were doing the exact same thing in the comp.* newsgroups. And before that? When you started developing something, a senior dev dropped a bunch of books on your desk and said “when you’ve finished reading those, let’s talk.”
The truth is, ever since libraries have been a thing, the majority of developers have just used the libraries without really understanding what goes on inside them. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing — the entire point of abstraction is so that developers can focus on the stuff they need to get done while ignoring the already solved problems.
The issues arise when you place code monkeys in software architecture or senior development positions, and they’ve never had the curiosity to read through the header files for those libraries they use, but instead just let Claude code complete their way to functionality. Because then most style guides with teeth go out the window, as there’s no intention behind the choices made.
And this results in something that really irks (and always has) senior software developers: instead of writing really clean, performant and novel code, those senior devs have to spend all their time doing code reviews and editing and refactoring codebases that nobody else understands.
Same as it ever was.
Essentially, JS is the new Flash….
JavaScript has its place as a lightweight runtime interpreter.
Rust has its place as a secure and modern way to engineer and produce dependable software.
…unless they’re in a country with corrupt leaders.
Expensive large screen displays are better.
Smart TVs are privacy invasive billboards that let you watch some TV on their terms.
Could be… it makes sense to reinvent the wheel if the previous inventors won’t share.
This one will be interesting. Unlike the other departments, the IRS and the SEC are used to working with hostile partners.
The big question though is: why?
CAPTCHA was implemented because machine learning was worse than people at solving the problems, so they could filter out the bots AND train their algorithms.
Today, the bots are often better than the humans, so both reasons for having CAPTCHAS no longer make sense. Even user verification can be easily faked by AI now.
Hmm… that’s odd. Definitely worth checking the system log, but you may not be able to tell much from that.
Ah; best thing to do is drop a note in the Apple Support Forum.
Personally, I haven’t used a screensaver in over a decade; I just have energy saver settings set to turn the screen off after 3 minutes of inactivity; separately, I set it to require login after 5 minutes.
Just watch: All three agree the deal while doubling their nuclear budgets….
Have you checked the system log in console.app and/or run EtreCheck?
I haven’t had that issue on my M1 MBP, although I have had fast user switching go to a beachball and require a force reboot.
The president isn’t a teenager, and as a sociopath wouldn’t have been representative of teenagers even when he was one.
If that AI companion isn’t on your own hardware, it will likely require a subscription eventually. And running an AI agent yourself isn’t cheap.
Is it really a surge when it goes up and stays there? It’s not like it has ebbed. There’s no reason to engage with it anymore.
Well, as a lot of us are on instances hosted outside the US, a very long time.