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Just like restarting a router fixes network problems (most of the time), reinstalling Windows is considered a universal cure for most software issues and bugs. You break it, you fix it
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What happens when Windows Update is itself the problem?
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The team will be holding a Twitter Spaces chat on Friday. He'll have to start an even bigger company next to get the question
I guess it won't be looking on Twitter to get the answer then?
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Kent Sharkey wrote: ...I guess it won't be looking on Twitter to get the answer then? Well, the death of everything is kinda the true nature of things...
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Are they planning to run a simulation?
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aims claims ‘to understand the true nature of the universe’
FTFY
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
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Deducing this (P0847) is a C++23 feature which gives a new way of specifying non-static member functions. *squints* *scratches head* *reads again* Okaaaaaayyyyy?
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I'm wondering why they keep inventing new things to stick in the language? Are there really that many edge cases that need a new feature to handle?
I’ve given up trying to be calm. However, I am open to feeling slightly less agitated.
I’m begging you for the benefit of everyone, don’t be STUPID.
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Quote: The reasons for allowing this may not seem immediately obvious, but a bunch of additional features fall out of this almost by magic. These include de-quadruplication of code, recursive lambdas, passing this by value, and a version of the CRTP which doesn’t require the base class to be templated on the derived class. Edge cases for pedants, though I'm being a bit unfair. I've found no compelling use cases (in my code) for recursive lambdas, passing this by value, or the CRTP, but that doesn't mean there aren't systems that can make effective use of these. That said, <thread> is still for toy systems; and they only recently got around to implementing <stacktrace> , still don't support sockets, and seem to have given up on integrating SIGSEGV and the like with exception handling. They seem to have lots of experience with things like the STL but not that much with serious systems.
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Imagine this scenario: you’ve built a new tool or service for software developers and engineers. Now you’re faced with a dilemma: what’s the best way to get it out into the world? "One potato, two potato, three potato, four..."
Or potato, however you prefer to pronounce it.
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Not the point of the article, but my criteria is:
1. The least # of tools possible yet maximizing the benefit of the ones I choose. So pretty much, Notepad++, IrfanView, Visual Studio, SSMS, WinSCP, Filezilla, and if I have to VS Code. And I avoid 99% of open source tools like the plague.
2. Apps - I guess I listed apps above, lol, but apps are tools. And again, avoid open source apps unless they are proven - viewed as an industry standard, long life, and does exactly what I need. Same with tools.
And to the point of the article, I don't write tools for the general coding public - I don't have the infrastructure in place for support, maintenances, dealing with bug reports and feature requests. Blech.
I write "ideas" and people can take them or leave them.
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DORA metrics have become the de facto standard for measuring software development and delivery success, but a study last month identifies where those measures alone were lacking. "Let's go, jump in! ¡Vámonos! You can lead the way, hey, hey"
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Elite engineering teams are, by definition, very rare. Only a few will consciously decide to hire top-notch talent. They must then know how to find it, screen it, and be willing to pay for it. With rare exceptions, every shop of more than size epsilon will be average.
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As the Kotlin community and ecosystem are expanding – and the demand for Kotlin developers is on the rise – we’re looking to equip computer science educators with the relevant tools and up-to-date resources necessary to meet this need. I would imagine it might also work to learn Kotlin
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Making it easy to exit subscriptions will just baffle everyone, FTC told Click here to read this article
And click somewhere else to comment
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The discovery is a boost to the rover's mission: finding signs of ancient life on Mars. "Oh man, wonder if he'll ever know he's in the best selling show"
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Sign up for the Microsoft Learn AI Skills Challenge and you'll get a head start on immersive and curated AI training content across Microsoft products and services, as well as four awesome AI-themed challenges. If all the other kids are learning AI development, will do you it too?
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The retail giant feels ‘unfairly singled out’ by the EU’s crackdown on illegal content Dog bites man
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The app formerly known as Tailwind gives you an AI model trained only on the documents you care about. Not cancelled yet?
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The espionage-focused group had access to impacted email data for a month before being detected. Put your stuff in the cloud, they said. It will be safe, they said.
Do I smell a theme coming on?
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Microsoft blocks a new batch of system drivers, but the loophole empowering them remains. Sign your drivers, they said. It means it's safe, they said.
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Sign your driver's, they said, with dollar sign in their eyes!
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Planets that contain liquid water, the key ingredient for life as we know it, may be 100 times more common than previously assumed, according to results that were presented at a major geochemistry conference on Monday. I like this potentially habitable world the best, thanks
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