The biggest thing he got wrong is the assumption that it’s good programmers writing libraries.
The biggest thing he got wrong is the assumption that it’s good programmers writing libraries.
Many organizations vendor packages in the repo for a number of different reasons and languages. Not just for node.
Human made changes is likely not what caused this image to occur.
111 files with that kind of change count is most likely a dependency update. But could also be that somebody screwed up a merge step somewhere.
That indicates that you might buy it if it’s good. The person I replied to implied they would never have purchased it at all.
If you were never going to buy it, why pirate it?
None of those things are required but they sure do help.
As a developer, the baby is how I see developers, too.
Fiddle was found in a thrift store. Couldn’t afford the bongos.
I see nothing wrong, here.
My furry ass isn’t sysadmin certified and I sit it on the switch without a wristband, keyboard, and laptop daily.
It’s been my experience that the .NET developer will miss the actual statement and take it as an assault on .NET being the best solution for every use case.
I’ve had my dad agree that something the Republicans are doing is extremely authoritarian and state that he is going to look past it because he wants lower taxes and likes guns in the same breath.
It could be a materialized view that is generated off of a weighting where you are nice until you have a certain number of incidents.
Where is the nearest fire to dump this comment in?
Even those I tend to open up in their specific IDEs when the time comes. It helps me separate the language but also the workflow.
As it should be. The needs of a systems language are very different than the needs of a virtualized or interpreted one. I honestly don’t see how people use a single IDE for every language but I respect their choice to do it.
I genuinely think it’s funny that in a post that isn’t making fun of Emacs you felt the need to defend Emacs.
It’s making fun of Emacs users for always finding ways to talk about Emacs. (Which I don’t think is a real problem anymore)
He would have continued getting away with it if he’d never run for President.
Yeah. That’s a different problem. 😁
I was more referring to the idea that subscriptions themselves are the problem.
I’m also ok with subscription prices increasing over time as costs increase. But I completely agree with removing services being a bad thing.
“Cloud” based services I genuinely understand the need for a recurring service model. They are paying for hosting of infrastructure on a recurring basis and a one time fee wouldn’t cover that.
Generally, though. I agree. If I’m running the software locally, I want to own my license fully.
Yeah. This was the face of an old man having trouble believing what he was hearing.
He looks like a walking corpse, but he seemed to understand what he was hearing and was just amazed by it.