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Price rises are coming, Intel tells customers, with inflation taking the blame. So you won't be able to pay for the chips you won't be able to get
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Sixty-eight percent of IT teams’ time is spent working on tasks that do not actually contribute to key business outcomes. We should have a daily meeting about this
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Sixty-eight percent of IT teams’ time is spent working on tasks that do not actually contribute to key business outcomes.
FTFY
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We surveyed more than 2,000 developers about whether GitHub Copilot helped them be more productive and improved their coding. Then, we matched this qualitative feedback and subjective perception with quantitative data around objective usage measurements and productivity. "But before I let that steam drill beat me down I'm gonna die with a hammer in my hand"
Code assistant assists coders. News at 11.
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Next week:
Research: How GitHub Copilot dumbs down programmers so they can't solve problems that open source hasn't solved for them.
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A web-based development environment fully optimized for Salesforce development and powered by Microsoft’s Visual Studio Codespaces. More force for your sales
I don't think there are that many Salesforce devs on here, but I try to cater to everyone.
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The space agency revealed the telescope’s images of the planet Jupiter, as well as an asteroid, used as reference targets when engineering teams were calibrating the observatory’s instruments. "But what exceeds all wonders, I have discovered four new planets and observed their proper and particular motions"
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IT departments are frequently feeling the sting of buyer's remorse following big-ticket enterprise technology purchases. Hopefully you don't regret buying this newsletter
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As more workers choose to work remotely, organizations face a dilemma: do they pay remote workers the same as those living in high-cost metropolitan regions? For some companies, that conundrum is already a reality. Making the big bucks, while out feeding the ducks
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If they don't, they'll lose employees to more local companies with lower budgets but willing to invest them in their people.
Also it may or may not be illegal, since it's a discrimination based on provenience. I'm not particularly knowledegable of the US laws and Consitution though. In my country it's becoming a Sword of Damocles, since it would be very much illegal straight up to the first articles of the Constitution.
GCS/GE d--(d) s-/+ a C+++ U+++ P-- L+@ E-- W+++ N+ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5? X R+++ tv-- b+(+++) DI+++ D++ G e++ h--- r+++ y+++* Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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The future of digital everything is currently under pressure and under staffed. Maybe he could do a bootcamp or something?
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Reported on before, but this gives more details:
Quote: The safety agency found that there were 16 crashes involving a Tesla striking first responder and road maintenance vehicles. Many of these incidents had some form of intervention from the forward collision warning and/or automatic emergency braking systems, but on average, Autopilot aborted vehicle control less than 1 second prior to impact. Of those crashes, NHTSA found that driver attention warnings were issued in just two cases. - NHTSA Expands Tesla Autopilot Investigation - Consumer Reports
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What I don't get is this notion that just because is electric doesn't just automatically mean AFAIK, that you have to, or now get to, do autopilot. Why don't we have this in high end ice cars like jag who ran out of stuff to try when price was no object? I'm all for Tesla and the rockets, maybe seducing Fred and Ethel to run with autopoilot like it's gonna save them is a bad idea. Just drive.
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Ron Anders wrote: just because is electric doesn't just automatically mean AFAIK, that you have to, or now get to, do autopilot
It doesn't; there is no technical reason why similar systems could not be developed for any vehicle. I suspect that Market Research showed that people who buy high-end cars like Jaguars do so for the joy of driving them, while those who buy electric vehicles do so just to get from A to B while feeling good about their "contribution to the planet".
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Daniel Pfeffer wrote: while feeling good about their "contribution to the planet". the sad part is that few see that the total impact is not really that much lower than before
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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While 16 crashes sounds serious, and they probably were for those involved, they are but a small portion of all crashes involving road work crews. Since Autopilot is not advertised as a fully autonomous system I think the NHTSA would be better served ensuring that full self driving systems handle this situation.
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obermd wrote: Since Autopilot is not advertised as a fully autonomous and since crashes have happened multiple times on it, perhaps it should be disabled until it is fully autonomous.obermd wrote: the NHTSA would be better served ensuring that full self driving systems handle this situation The car manufacturers are the ones that ensure it. NHTSA can only define it and enforce that definition.
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David O'Neil wrote: and since crashes have happened multiple times on it, perhaps it should be disabled until it is fully autonomous.
In this case let's disable all driver assist features, including automatic transmission slush boxes that allow the car to creep forward if the driver's foot isn't on the brake. The bottom line is that until fully autonomous vehicles are proven safe on the roads safety remains the driver's responsibility.
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Yeah, maybe the safety agency should create a universal test course for autonomous vehicles that standardizes the way they are tested.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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obermd wrote: roads safety remains the driver's responsibility.
So take away the system that makes them think it isn't.
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reminds me of will smith in irobot
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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God I hated that movie. Loved the book. Hated the movie.
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The only thing the movie had in common with the book was the name.
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Although we can’t draw exact comparisons between the two, as FDD is a framework while TDD is a process, we’ll discover that each has noteworthy pros and cons As opposed to sales-driven development?
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