Just because it’s dangerous and not always fun doesn’t make it a “mission”. Exactly like when some rich schmuck pays 150k to climb Everest.
Can we stop calling it a “mission”? This is an expensive vacation for billionaires, not a scientific endeavor.
I use World Poker. Not FOSS, unfortunately.
How do you explain that amyloid-targetting therapies are seeing some success, even if limited?
I think you might want to go through a python tutorial before you start on coding game. It can get frustrating if you don’t know the basics.
I’m participating! Codingame is a lot of fun, I highly recommend it.
Is posix still relevant in any way?
I’m not sure but I think some of these drugs can make permanent damage.
Obviously survival remains the topmost concern, but thinking about side effects sounds like the logical next step now that we’ve made tremendous progress with survival.
No 😁
It’s just a funny video from LinkedIn or TikTok
Lisp is the only one I haven’t learned yet 😁
Rust, haskell, python, c++ are all interesting choices. I would argue that c# is too close to what you already know to be interesting.
If I were you though, I’d pick a project first, then decide what language makes sense for it.
That person needs to keep Joe’s heart ticking until 12:05 (DC time) on Jan 20, 2025. After that, Joe can kick off whenever he likes.
What happens if he dies between election day and Jan 20?
Well, this should give them some motivation.
It seems like a lot of people think Palestine needs to do stuff but Israel doesn’t. I’m not sure if it’s a double standard, racism, Israeli exceptionalism or what.
In my case, it’s none of that. It’s your question: “how can Palestine gain its freedom”.
Now let’s be crazy for a moment and imagine that both sides collaborate to fix the issue. I think it would be mostly the same for Israel: get rid of the lunatics, realize that Palestinians are fairly close relatives, work on forgiveness on both sides, and work on a fair two-state solution or even better a single-state solution.
Here’s my take on it:
Are you really sure? 😂
Am I the only one to still use regular vim? I tried to switch to Neovim a few years ago, but there were a few things I didn’t like, so I switched back. Vim has improved tremendously, so I no longer feel a need to switch. With LSP and Copilot, I feel that I am close to the optimal dev environment these days…
Could other states follow suit ?
Not a direct answer, but I highly recommend reading Outlive, by Peter Attia. It’s completely changed the way I think about these things. And it’s actually grounded in science.