

You’re just looking at them wrong.


You’re just looking at them wrong.
As a software developer, hearing “it works on my machine” from a subset of users is actually helpful information. It means the problem is environmental, or data related, instead of an explicit code issue. It does narrow things down a bit.
The issue arises when some people treat it as a reason to ignore a problem.


I had a paper route. I hated it. They kept assigning me random houses that were several miles outside my zone.
I love heights. I’d be all over this.


Plants eventually decompose, releasing the CO2. Rock generally doesn’t have that problem


I found one of these little dudes trucking across my yard yesterday. By the time I grabbed my phone to take a picture, this is what I found. Now I know why he was in such a hurry.



Does that mean their medical care is free?
Did the Gnome people ever figure out how to put icons on the desktop yet?


I just started playing Elementallis. It’s a Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past style action adventure. I’m enjoying it. It weighs in at just a hair over 1 GB.


WTF is going on with the symbols above the number keys?
Ahh, NM, that entire image is AI slop.


No malicious site would ever fake this kind of flow in order to get someone to scan a dangerous QR code. Nope, that would never happen.


Films starting animals have to be an outlier messing with the data. Animal movies are insanely numerous and popular.


Ask yourself what happens if you get diagnosed with cancer in that first year instead of staying healthy.


I love LinqPad


Sounds neat


If I recall, most medical mistakes take place over shift changes. Things like a patient getting a double dose of meds because they didn’t realize the prior shift already gave them. The idea is that minimizing the number of shift changes reduces the number of mistakes.
Sure, you can, but that doesn’t make it respectful.
It’s in the actual Flag Code, which the federal government should care about. A lot of pop-culture gets it wrong because it looks bad to people that don’t really know any better. Of course that’s why the AI got it wrong, because it was trained on TV shows instead of the actual regs.
Apparently not obsessed enough to make sure it isn’t backwards.
It’s probably some app engine that lets product teams enter prompts without even giving the option to view the code.