

To answer disassociating you. You had help. That’s how.
To answer disassociating you. You had help. That’s how.
This isn’t 32000 in 1 wave, though. This is ~2500 a year over 13 years. Even the answers given at the beginning of the study could have changed wildly if the same people had been polled at the end. And even if not, 4 people per city is not representative of an entire city at any given moment of time.
What demographics in China did they poll each year? Did they poll people of different racial profiles? Did they poll uyhgurs? Were the candidates selected randomly or were the assigned by the government? If the latter, were they coached or paid? Any number of things could throw off that study.
That is by far the least satisfying study I’ve ever heard. 32000 people surveyed over 13 years. That’s essentially 3.5 people per city in China. How are we to take that as a valid survey?
I’d certainly be interested in how those Harvard studies were accomplished what with much of China not being on the Internet. 95 percent certainly sounds high.
Not sure if you’re suggesting that it’s a problem of knowing the language or sarcastically saying that Node.js allows for developers to not know what’s happening.
On the case that you’re thinking it’s a knowledge of the language issue, that’s not what I’m getting at. Typically, what I see with full stack developers is an over reliance on frameworks to do the heavy lifting to the detriment is their skill sets. Often not knowing how to optimize DB queries or trouble shoot performance problems. This works fine in purely CRUD use cases, but falls apart when scaling using more complex patterns starts to occur. I’ve spoken with Sr and staff full stack developers that truly believe the only thing you need to do in order to scale a web app is add nodes.
I’ve worked with my fair share that were front end devs that didn’t understand the backend, too
I wake up at noon because I’m depressed and went back to sleep.
Think about the Pentium versions of the Celeron, too. XP was their peak time.
Do it 2 days before highly anticipated mod drops
The biggest thing he got wrong is the assumption that it’s good programmers writing libraries.
This interaction is so indicative of the reality of device fandom.
The Android user isn’t storing information about the iPhone in their brain.
The iPhone user is responding like everybody knows everything about iPhone features and it was dumb of the android user to not know this thing.
Many organizations vendor packages in the repo for a number of different reasons and languages. Not just for node.
Human made changes is likely not what caused this image to occur.
111 files with that kind of change count is most likely a dependency update. But could also be that somebody screwed up a merge step somewhere.
None of those things are required but they sure do help.
I’ve seen scrub/dish daddies and did not know the mommy existed
This was my take away. They paid 1 individual over twice the amount they lost last year. That fix is easy math to me.
Yes, but other cars aren’t operating inside enclosed tunnels at all times.
Read they paid spez over twice what they lost, so I’m gonna say they did it to themselves.
The post isn’t claiming perfection. It’s claiming production ready. Very different things.
The confusion there is the claim that good/perfect means done. It means ready for use and extensible.
Note: I’m not agreeing/disagreeing with the claim. Just clarifying the point