If C is so great, why do you have to hack in garbage collection?
If C is so great, why do you have to hack in garbage collection?
I bought some of the Star Trek branded wines a few years back. They were unremarkable.
Seeing that Thor movie once was 1 time too many. I can’t imagine seeing it 33 times.
This just blew my mind. I had always assumed Java was older. I started writing hobby projects in Java in the 90s. I don’t think I heard about Python until the early 2000s.
I find it difficult to believe that breaking down steel to be 3d printed into large structures for a bridge is faster or more energy efficient than casting the parts instead.
Why is half this article about population decline? The writing also seems weird in places. AI generated, maybe?
I felt like the real prank was on me for having paid money to watch it
“why” is a perfectly valid question to ask
There’s a good amount of star Trek content on Netflix already. I expect more will follow if paramount can’t keep it’s numbers up
That’s not the point though. The point is that the human comedian and the AI both benefit from consuming creative works covered by copyright.
Further what do you think I meant with high end premium?
The base model X costs twice the base model Y. I’d consider the X expensive. I wouldn’t put the Y in the same category.
I wouldn’t consider the Tesla model Y a high end premium vehicle. It was the best selling vehicle in the world earlier this year, in spite of the higher price than gas-powered competitors:
https://www.theverge.com/2023/5/26/23738581/tesla-model-y-ev-record-world-bestselling-car-electric
Somebody crunched some numbers and decided that they’d keep more customers by making an optional fee instead of raising the price for everyone
What is wrong with Google’s C++ guide?
Exactly. I use 10 at home and at work and have no issues with either. There’s no technical reason for anyone to upgrade.
What do you mean by UTC only?
Why are they worse?
I was able to read the article without logging in
Check your employment contract. If that includes an NDA or a confidentiality agreement, the company may own your design as well as any code produced. Writing the program from scratch a second time may still end up being company property.
Given that they didn’t put your program into production, it’s unlikely they would pursue you legally for releasing a new version on your own.
I use Ubuntu at work. No issues with it.