Trading in a P8P for $699 is wild. The Google store offers $360 in Canada. And the P9P costs CAD$1,349.
Life goes on past thirty five. I knew that was the case, but my plans and goals only went as far as then.
Kinda like when you graduate uni and you realize that there's still more stuff to do.
"This is no time to play politics with housing," one Conservative source said. "Cities are entitled to their fair share of the pie, even if it comes from the Liberal government."
That sums it up.
That makes sense. Thanks!
Got it! Thanks!
Ah that makes sense! Thanks!
I wonder what's going on with our PPE stockpile. Googling around I didn't see that we've improved our situation. Or started using a prime vendor strategy.
Can someone explain this to me?
I thought those were for only when shit is seriously wrong and execution can't continue in the current state.
That's how it starts. Nice and simple. Everyone understands.
Until
some resource was in a bad state
and you decide you want to recover from that situation, but you don't want to refactor all your code.
Suddenly, catching exceptions and rerunning seems like a good idea. With that normalized, you wonder what else you can recover from.
Then you head down the rabbit hole of recovering from different things at different times with different types of exception.
Then it turns into confusing flow control.
The whole Result<ReturnValue,Error> thing from Rust is a nice alternative.
Is there anything left?
Does this mean I'll have to lose my own mail?
Edit: In the past year, Canada Post has lost: registration stickers for my car, a requisition from a doctor, bills, and magazines. I've requested a trace on my mail to sort out the problem, but I haven't heard anything in the two months since the request.