Sounds like programmers with sovereign citizen approach
Sounds like programmers with sovereign citizen approach
What happen when the repository is getting forked? Goofing with the license is all haha fun till nasty lawyers get into the picture and you get all sort of liability claims
Going down the rabbit hole is fun.
Starting with this https://imgur.com/little-boy-riding-odd-giant-rabbit-1956-tHDdboR
And ending at Why aren’t rabbits and hares larger?
I’m too much online to know the original with shelter cats and coyotes, great analogy OP!
Would you like automatic update to mess with your disk partition allocations without requesting explicit permission to do so? As long as searching the error code would give me the explanation and solution I’m Ok with manual fix this time
The issue can be resolved by allocating an additional 250 MB of storage space to the recovery partition. Details on how to do that can be found here.
However, at least on Windows 10, Microsoft has acknowledged that an automatic resolution for this issue will not be released and as such, the only way to fix this is manually.
So there is a solution and the headline should be “Microsoft admits it can’t automatically fix…”
One part is for uploads and the other for downloads, brilliant gadget!
Keeping the chicken in the oven could lead to nasty bugs
Maybe he is running it for his niece
“Look mom, I know it’s 20 years since you last talk with Agatha, but she’s family now and the two of you must be in our wedding picture”
Here is the uncropped version, an Italian wedding in the 40s. With all participants equally thrilled for the photoshoot
Mickey Gurdus, an Israeli ham radio operator and media listener. In the age before the internet he used to listen to every transmission he could find from his homemade lab.
21 MAY 2021:
Delays and cancellations to trains between Manchester and London due to ‘overhead wire problem’ Trains may be delayed by up to 90 minutes or cancelled
Plant Lavender, Rosemary or Pepper above your dig. Try to place your garden in area of old burial grounds.
It all depends on the implementation and need.
In-memory structures are usually faster to work with, but harder to coordinate multiple updates from multiple sources (different applications, services, etc).
Databases have all sort of failsafe mechanisms to ensure data integrity and recovery options, in most times there is no need to reinvent it all over again.
Persistent - do you need to access the data again once your program was finished? How often does the data change by other programs/tasks once you read it? How big is your data and how complex are the connections between your data objects?
Many times the implementation is a mixed approach. It is better to know and calculate the needs before you start your project, but as it usually happen, once you get performance issues, you start optimizing adding in-memory cache or scale to a bigger database.
Could be this:
https://github.com/Qwant/erdapfel/issues/1474