magic_lobster_party

  • 0 Posts
  • 99 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
cake
Cake day: August 15th, 2024

help-circle

  • Now it was a few years ago I used it regularly last time, but moving to Slack was a huge relief.

    One thing I remember with teams is that sending files was always a hassle. Sometimes files didn’t arrive. Files couldn’t have the same name as other previously sent files (because everything was in a onedrive folder).

    Slack has much better search. It felt like I could finally find the messages I wanted to find. With teams it was a gamble.

    And then there’s much better bot integration. At my work we have multiple bots that send messages when there’s e.g. production errors. We can then start thread discussions directly on that posts about the error, or link it to other channels to escalate the issue. And with a working search engine we can easily find the conversation again as a reference.

    It got many small things that just adds value.













  • I love it!

    I consider it to be the best “detective” game ever made. Other detective games, like Phoenix Wright, can easily be brute forced. Just exhaust all dialogue options, and in the case of game over, just repeat all the correct answers until you’re back on track.

    The system where correct answers are revealed after five correct guesses is genius. It discourages brute forcing, while maintaining a short feedback loop so the player knows they’re making progress. I wish more games continued on this idea.

    Only thing I don’t like about it is that I can only play it for the first time once. It has almost no replay value.





  • From the original document:

    Software manufacturers should build products in a manner that systematically prevents the introduction of memory safety vulnerabilities, such as by using a memory safe language or hardware capabilities that prevent memory safety vulnerabilities. Additionally, software manufacturers should publish a memory safety roadmap by January 1, 2026.

    My interpretation is that smart pointers are allowed, as long it’s systematically enforced. Switching to a memory safe language is just one example.