I was walking up to take photos with the Star Trek cast when LeVar Burton noticed how I walked and commented on how much swagger it has. Totally made my decade.
I was walking up to take photos with the Star Trek cast when LeVar Burton noticed how I walked and commented on how much swagger it has. Totally made my decade.
Murder. It’s how many kids you’ve murdered. Therefore you will be in prison and have negative spontaneity.
Supply chain makes the most sense. It’s not like pagers are used super commonly and I doubt they have good margins. Would be pretty easy to sneak something in.
Going to the gym won’t make you less skinny. Eating more at a surplus will. Also 1g protein/lb of body weight per day.
Yeah but they’re much more vulnerable to SAMs at altitude.
Is this the DENNIS system?
There are quads that can do 200+mph these days, only a matter of time before they’re cheap enough to be used to hunt down the helis.
A lot of people would say the internet was down if a large number of those products weren’t available. Also companies like Google do own parts of the physical Internet infrastructure.
I bet you could bring it up with them now…
It’s from Godzilla
My point is that new weapons are better than old ones but they’re still fulfilling the same intention. It’s not like the inventor of the old grenades wouldn’t jump at the chance to increase the lethality of their creations.
The GMLRS used in Ukraine are also optimized for fragmentation and nobody is complaining because they’re fired at military targets.
https://youtu.be/HCoUTCBALZI?t=130 shows indentations for a RG-42.
But anyways the point is fragmentation munitions are commonplace.
How is this different from any grenade? Even the cheapest RG-42 grenades have pre formed fragmentation.
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.
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.
There’s not exactly a path per se as you should be able to pick up whichever is used at your job.
I’ve gone from LabVIEW into C# desktop applications into Android Java into Typescript web front ends all with some other languages and platforms sprinkled throughout.
The most important thing is being ready to learn and pick the right tool for the job.
Aren’t fluorescent bulbs the ones that flicker?
I agree about the color temperature.
What’s wrong with LED lights?
Don’t lightning bolt me bro!
Maybe it’s a trap?