

Old languages should be able to learn new tricks.


Old languages should be able to learn new tricks.


Hey @TheracAriane@thebrainbin.org it comes off as aggressively confrontational to reply to someone and @mention them at the same time.


Sure, but in 35 years on windows I’ve never used it.
Only makes sense to use it in a script, which you wouldn’t just drop into Linux anyway.


I’ve used Windows since 3.1 and WTF is winver?
Sounds like a PR from a lone weirdo.


Using thorn in English is a pathetic bid to appear smart.
The first one is against code too. No railing on the landing.


Thanks for sharing that. Seems like a promising vis technique but would work better with fewer final states than I used for a regular Sankey.


Is there any site that does this?


If you know something better I’d like to give it a spin.


Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded.


If half of your applications never reply even to reject, when is the next round? Need more activity to keep your pipeline full.
I generally didn’t have more than 3 or so going on at once in the later stages.


She’s just the best at being the worst.
I already have SMB but want something easier for non tech family members.
Nginx sounds like the way to go and just symlink www -> recipes
Thanks.
edit to add final update:


Would be stupid to use for production, but makes a lot of sense as a canary for problems in new versions of packages.


If they can get Voyager by Christmas my daughter would go nuts.


Sounds like a long road


But both professions use scissors?
C lets you shoot yourself in the foot.
C++ lets you reuse the bullet.
Andreas Katsulas was also great as Ambassador G’Kar on Babylon 5.