This seems like a weird interpretation, at least based on the paraphrasing above. There’s no implicit anti union sentiment, it’s just acknowledging he has an obligation to be a good steward for his employees?
This seems like a weird interpretation, at least based on the paraphrasing above. There’s no implicit anti union sentiment, it’s just acknowledging he has an obligation to be a good steward for his employees?
No nested SQL queries allowed.
Edit: it was for a built in query language to populate dashboards (think Jira JQL meets Domo).
I had some inefficient SQL queries that meant we had to put some guardrails around user input so others didn’t take down prod like I did
I love how specific the labor jobs on the left are and the right side is like… All mathematicians.
I’ve had nothing but issues with Microsoft hardware… Even excluding Xbox stuff, my SP4 had major issues with video corruption and hard freezes. Multiple RMA attempts came back defective or damaged, even the first party folio keyboard went bad. These were widespread defects and once warranty was up I was sol.
The only thing that somewhat extended its life before it went full spicy pillow was putting Linux Mint on it with some kernel patches.
Thank God this community exists, but I’ll never buy another surface product as long as I live.
Absolutely this. I’m cheap AF and continued to do this, but Samsung has stopped these incentives so now I’m “stuck” on my s21 ultra.
I use quotes because it’s an awesome phone and 2 years later it’s still crushing everything I throw at it so I have no qualms with hanging onto it.
The difference is that when you buy a vps you aren’t handing over all your access creds to random developers.
And “harming lemmy” may be an intent that sparks a DDoS but there are other intentions that should make users wary. Harvesting creds of people who reuse passwords across accounts is an easy example that could have more serious implications to the individual user.
As a corporate entity Reddit had much more liability to worry about and more to lose.
Part of the appeal of the fediverse is that any of us anywhere can run an instance with different stakes, applicable laws, etc.
Without having to worry about profit, conversations can flourish.
I think it would actually be pretty cool if somehow you could link configured subreddits that people have saved or subscribed to into a search for Lemmy communities.
Obviously we want to minimize time that distracts you from the Lemmy version, but I do think it would help people pivot into Lemmy communities away from their favorite subreddits.
I largely agree with you, there’s already redundant subreddits and such.
But I think when we’re trying to capture a ton of Reddit users, anything that represents a hurdle to new user adoption is a concern. That goes double for things that are intrinsic to the Fediverse that aren’t intuitive to new users like myself.
Especially for an obese country.