This was my splurge purchase when the startup I was in got acquired.
This was my splurge purchase when the startup I was in got acquired.
The only benefit I can see is if you don’t take anything back down the gravity well. Build up manufacturing directly in space.
That’s a pretty bad example since most functional frameworks include an any or some function that returns early.
I mean it tends to show up in the FE due to JS being fundamentally callback based. You’re basically responding to events and the like. Unfortunately the language was not designed for reactivity so they’re all added on via frameworks.
Are there benefits in not having a GC in WASM?
Also are there mainstream memory safe languages without a borrow checker? There’s some experimental ones out there.
Rust isn’t strictly functional? Do you mean you’d like a language with garbage collection?
I mean I’ll use it as an admission that a situation is ridiculous but there’s no other options.
Yeah this is my goto time killer on the phone or tablet if I’m traveling. No need for an Internet connection so great on a plane.
I’ll recommend this to my wife who plays Pikmin Go religiously.
Is it Amazon because they did a really good job at keeping teams separate (via APIs)?
It’s more akin to a plugin since it doesn’t change the code at all.
The actual protocol doesn’t matter, just that the team has to own it and publish it and other teams must use these APIs. Otherwise you get teams adding and modifying other teams code and you end up with the monolith anyways.
If it’s something I don’t really want to do then it’s 1.5x my current salary assuming 8 hours of work per day.
It’s been said before that microservices solve organizational problems. When you’re forced to go through official APIs, each team becomes responsible for their own connections to other teams. If you’re at a scale where a few people can be responsible for the entire system there’s really no benefit.
The problem is when medicine is for profit, you really do end up with that feeling when doctors are rushed to get you out of the door because they need to see ten patients an hour. When you’re the product it’s harder to build that trust.
It was probably better before when family doctors actually had a relationship with your family.
I originally switched because there was still a small flagship iPhone. However I stayed because it works just fine and iMessage worked better than SMS for whatever that time period was before people moved to other messaging apps.
Now I use an Android phone for work and don’t really see enough advantage for me to switch.
Ah yes it is rather poorly optimized. Before it I was playing Against the Storm which doesn’t have such high requirements.
Also Mount and Blade provides some amazing single player experiences that are hard to find elsewhere. Get into a battle with hundreds of units, command a cavalry charge in first person while you personally lead a flank from the other side.
Not to mention she’s been immortalized as Meitnerium