Is it not on purpose? So you know when you have a 1 or 2 bullet salvo that you are out?
gbin
And now compare the GDP of the one who does vs who doesn't. Whatever the relation of the causality is, it is bad. I would guess it is the same for the states in the United states.
Copies are just very strong statistical correlations.
I have been an Arch user for years now and anytime I touch a debian based distro it is such a headache: weird patched packages that don't compile anything past or present, insta dependency hell with PPAs, package names of 200 characters because apt doesn't have a good way to represent metadata... It made me a strong believer that trying to fight the bit rot and stick to the old stuff is counterproductive: a consistent head based development with a good community fixing bugs super quickly results in less hours of work fighting the paleolithic era dependencies, safer (as security fixes are faster to get in, packages are foreign to hackers and constantly changing etc), easier to find documentation as you don't need to dig into history to find which option existed or not, recent stuff is also easier to support for the developers of the various packages as it is fresh in their minds. Another point is to look at it from a tech debt lens: either you fix your stuff to work with current deps now or you just accumulate tech debt for the next engineer to fix in a way larger and combining a mountain of breakages in the future that of course IT and SREs will never want to do until the 15y old software is a disaster of security issues...
I see some UI elements reuse more that textures no?
"one man's trash is another man's treasure" almost to the letter.
I have seen another contributing factor in CS: it is really hard for the management to keep a good senior to junior ratio ie. A lot of juniors are trying to enter the workforce today. It means that during covid and shortly after the companies definitely relaxed as much as they could the geographical constraints for senior remote roles, also being senior they trusted them to work remotely not needing too much direct supervision. And now it backfires when your company is in silicon valley and you ask your senior developer from the boonies Colorado to move to an industrial concrete jungle.
So so so so many ads in that page that I genuinely lost the article in the middle, that's a first.
UTF-8 is a variable encoding so none of the fixed sized type would work better for it.
Literally every product. People feel so much safer after that :)
Didn't they say at one point that windows 10 would be the last windows version as they are switching to a rolling release model?