I recognise that reference!
I recognise that reference!
The Art of Computer Programming by Donald Knuth
Memory isn’t infinite, CPUs can’t process all integers, and Santa isn’t real
Wait, what? Need a spoiler tag.
It will be interesting to find out if these words will come back and haunt them.
I’ve been running Linux on all my computers for literally decades. But I’ve just started an online course and the college requires Edge — not Chromium, must be Edge. Yes, I’ve changed useragent, only Edge will work. Grrrr.
Maybe a $10 Uber Eats gift card?
No, have you?
Just give them a $10 Uber Eats card!
Not allowed to call them “females” any more.
Since version 3, TeX has used an idiosyncratic version numbering system, where updates have been indicated by adding an extra digit at the end of the decimal, so that the version number asymptotically approaches π. This is a reflection of the fact that TeX is now very stable, and only minor updates are anticipated. The current version of TeX is 3.141592653
Because they’re not Google.
Essentially John Oliver’s episode on Boeing.
This has been my experience of agile in multiple workplaces.
If anything goes wrong with the deploy script, such as failing tests, no harm will be done because the script exits upon the first error encountered.
How do you clean up? Once the deploy script is fixed, how do you know what’s been done and what needs redoing?
Have you considered ansible/puppet/chef/salt — environments dedicated to deployment and cleanup, with idempotency to allow for fixing and repeating the deployment, across multiple operating systems and versions?
I saw that too and thought “here we go again”, but in this case it seems SCO stands for Source Code Origin.
I was part of a team that was trained in COBOL to help update code in time for Y2K. We’ve been headhunted by the same company several times in the last ten years to further update and maintain the same code, originally written in the mid-1970s. I’m now 56, and I suspect that code base will live at least as long as I do.