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You wish it was like that in the medical industry, but it absolutely is not
You wish it was like that in the medical industry, but it absolutely is not
Buy a keyboard and monitor
NGL, this looks kinda terrible
Parts of “Rift of the Necrodancer”
And the only thing even worse than SCRUM is literally every other option
No, that’s not how that works.
Users can generate their own keys, and you know it’s the same user as long as they have the same key, even if they’re on different servers.
No certificate authority is required for this kind of use case.
“Discord said users will be able to turn off the ads in their settings.”
Remote Desktop
What this shows is how terrible raw JS is, when all of this crap is required to fix all of the edge cases and make things actually work the way it’s supposed to.
Dyson Sphere Program is like Satisfactory if it had good game design and less bugs.
Using tools to break the encryption for backup purposes is legal in the US, but distributing tools to do so is not legal because the tools can be used for non-backup purposes.
$250 even with a sale. Nothing to see here folks…
I definitely remember hearing that term in the 90’s.
Your own rock, in this economy?
Opera 12 was my main browser until it died and was replaced by a completely unrelated and terrible browser called Opera 2013. Opera 12’s spiritual successor is Vivaldi, and that’s what I still use now.
Vivaldi is the only browser that has all of the UI features that I want… No amount of extensions and customization of Chrome, Edge, or Firefox has been able to come anywhere close to matching it.
If you’re branching logic due to the existence or non-existence of a field rather than the value of a field (or treating undefined different from null), I’m going to say you’re the one doing something wrong, not the Java dev.
These two things SHOULD be treated the same by anybody in most cases, with the possible exception of rejecting the later due to schema mismatch (i.e. when a “name” field should never be defined, regardless of the value).