[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 18 points 3 weeks ago

Intent is harder to prove but just as much a part of the US legal system as anything else. Everybody knows what he's doing.

Iasip: "because of the implication"

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 19 points 1 month ago

I'd be cautious about running any "leaked" software directly, great way to identify the modding community if it dials home, maybe run it in a vm, behind a vpn? Unless it's just source code in which case carry on

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 month ago

I think that's the point? This is a direct response to musk is it not?

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 15 points 3 months ago

I still remember flipboard being forcefully installed as the action button app for an old phone. My rage continues to smolder a decade later.

An app that couldn't be uninstalled and took up precious resources. That's all they'll ever be to me.

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 20 points 3 months ago

There is a ton of literature out there, but in a few words:

Rust is built from the ground up with the intention of being safe, and fast. There are a bunch of things you can do when programming that are technically fine but often cause errors. Rust builds on decades of understanding of best practices and forces the developer to follow them. It can be frustrating at first but being forced to use best practices is actually a huge boon to the whole community.

C is a language that lets the developer do whatever the heck they want as long as it's technically possible. "Dereferencing pointer 0?" No problem boss. C is fast but there are many many pitfalls and mildly incorrect code can cause significant problems, buffer overflows for example can open your system to bad actors sending information packets to the program and cause your computer to do whatever the bad actor wants. You can technically write code with that problem in both c and rust, but rust has guardrails that keep you out of trouble.

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 19 points 3 months ago

Nice to have a fulltime friend

It tends to change what you're free to do every day

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 20 points 4 months ago

They certainly charge enough to pay these people that much, I can't find any concrete numbers but it seems like the consensus is that the ride share company takes between 25% and 75% of the ride profit. What a racket

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 18 points 4 months ago

No, I live here.

I hate

  • religious zealotry
  • massive dichotomy in polotical ideologies
  • identity politics
  • warmongering
  • brainwashing (pledge of allegiance?!)
  • poor treatment of poor and homeless
  • prison complex
  • poor education system
  • incredibly expensive healthcare
  • terrible zoning laws and car centricity
  • hiroshima, native genocide, iraq, and so many more. The US has shed so much blood and terror inflicted on the world population
  • world police, vigilante, the US is basically every bad movie villian in country form
  • regressing views on women's rights
  • the history of slavery
[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 16 points 4 months ago

Could be a really bad sunburn, the image isn't super clear. Google "sunburn blisters"

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 17 points 6 months ago

Plenty of anecdotes out there, you'll find people with every kind of experience. Don't stress too much, the job itself depends entirely on the team, product, and industry.

I work in a tucked away industry highly specialized in some random sector of manufacturing and service. I've worked at three different companies in the same sector and each was wildly different. In general programming in a professional setting causes a tremendous shift in the way you program no matter where you go.

The things you focus on in a team are: how can I make this code resilient so none of my teammates can screw it up, readable so anyone can understand, and runnable so after every iteration it will function.

Your style conventions and preferred way of programming may have to shift to accommodate working with others. No more super cool but impossible to read functions, no more 70 layer deep polymorphic chains, no more random spacing and inconsistent brackets.

Programming professionally comes in different flavors. Young startups need hard hitting fast develpers who type 150wpm and munch through requests like nothing, leaving a trail of tech debt and bugs behind but getting the product to mvp status. Established companies need methodical, measured programmers who think through the consequences of their actions and write code that will stand the test of time, programmers who don't say "we should just remake the whole thing" every tuesday.

I've been programming professionally for about a decade and can confidently say I would be pleased to stay in the career for the rest of my life. I am not confident that the precise job I have today will even be available in that timeframe because there have been amazing leaps in technology that convert business logic into code, see copilot's new workspace product.

Go for it, if you find a business that feels like a bad fit move on. Plenty of businesses are itching for competent developers.

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 17 points 7 months ago

That's just what a sneaky person would say 🧐

Now I'm taking extra precautions just to spite you!

[-] 0x01@lemmy.ml 16 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

In 10 years

  • Selling high strength magnets without regulation
  • Petroleum cars

In 100 years?

  • Eating meat
  • Natural gas stoves
  • Oil/Natural gas furnaces
  • Anonymous online communities
  • Not wearing a sort of body-camera in most professions

In 1000 years?

  • Religion, mysticism, paranormal beliefs
  • An inversion of religious moralism, I think things that are thought of as evil will have to become the norm, genetic modification, cloning, etc.
  • Eating food in general
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0x01

joined 1 year ago