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If you ever talk to, or read an interview with, a musician, they will inevitably, and quickly, end up talking about their influences. "Blame it on the boogie"
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Though it looks like the entrance to an alien tomb, mission scientists say it's a natural feature. How else could John Carter have made it there?
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Vastly underrated movie! Here's a better pic, which shows another 'door' to the left: MSL 3466 MR
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Beginning with the .NET 6.0.200 SDK or Visual Studio 2022 version 17.1, preview features in C# are available for you to try. Because this compiler goes to 11
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Engineering types like software developers are inspired by a sense of the possibilities inherent in building things. If you build it, they might not need it
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The author blunders in thinking this is about engineering. Given enough time, ALL organizations end up making perpetuating the organization the goal in and of itself. In other words, bureaucracies will bureaucracy.
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"Never go in against a technologist when nerdism is on the line!"
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Blue-green algae, a type of cyanobacteria, set in a container on a windowsill powered a computer continuously for six months using photosynthesis It just plays Farmville though
And maybe that old aquarium screen saver
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Talk about a lack of knowledge by that author. There's nothing rare about any mineral used in batteries. There are environmental, economical, and in some cases, ethical concerns during extraction of these minerals, but none are rare.
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Low-code platforms come packed with promise, but how do they perform in the real world? Yes
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The US is readying new encryption standards that will be so ironclad that even the nation’s top code-cracking agency says it won’t be able to bypass them. So...front door then?
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Open-source software supply chain security is now a vital issue of national security. Who knew Joe was good at finding software vulnerabilities?
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It appears that the latest cumulative update for Windows 11 and 10 did not go as smoothly as Microsoft wanted. But of course it does
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Coinbase users are reporting difficulty withdrawing funds, heightening fears amid a widespread crash in cryptocurrency prices. "God Himself could not sink this ship."
Convenient timing on that "sorry, you can't withdraw your money" problem. How very 1929 of them.
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Next: NFTs of the "I lost everything in the crypto bust" sob stories.
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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An unregulated, decentralized currency. What could possibly go wrong?
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Little more than with a regulated, centralized currency.
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True, it disappears more slowly than outright frauds. That's what keeps the game going.
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David O'Neil wrote: The money in my wallet doesn't just disappear.
The money in your wallet is currently disappearing at a rate of over 10% per year, thanks to inflation.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Yes, but at least it still totals up to $1!
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Yes, but to the original point, it's the value of that dollar that changes.
And isn't that what's changing with cryptocurrency, the value?
You can still have 1 whole bitcoin, but its value in dollars has changed.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Just remember that Web3 is going just great[^] 💸💸💸
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
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