I though to exit vim you had to do this?
Esc : ! sudo rm -rf /
It is strange how you have to enter your password (mine is hunter2) to exit with this though. But that is all part of being a l33t hax0r.
I though to exit vim you had to do this?
Esc : ! sudo rm -rf /
It is strange how you have to enter your password (mine is hunter2) to exit with this though. But that is all part of being a l33t hax0r.
I though to exit vim you had to do this?
Esc : ! sudo rm -rf /
It is strange how you have to enter your password (mine is hunter2) to exit with this though. But that is all part of being a l33t hax0r.
One actual reason I could see doing it this way is that digital zoom pixelates something fierce and could make it harder to see something subtle (e.g. the particular curve of a shadow that you need to be able to see somewhat in the context of the larger picture).
@fish said:
Has the profession really turned so bad that people no longer have pride in their code and just write stuff to get their monthly paycheck?
I hate to break it to you, but software development is not a profession.
@Weng said:
one actually quit and was paid MAD money to stay, two more of us were within hours of following when we heard senior management was coming and decided to stay and hear them out,
So...TRWTF is that the two of you who didn't leave lost out on the MAD money and now have the same job title/responsibilities but much less pay???
@Weng said:
Given contractor's propensity to never stick around more than 3 years at any given gig,
I don't know this, but maybe 3 years is the MTF for a company to either 1)Lose the interesting projects or 2) Become the WTF-ery -- hence spurring any decent contractor to find greener pastures. When I did contracting I was happy to put up with a decent amount (a job in the hand is worth 1E5 postings on Dice/Monster/etc...) but at a certain point you need to move on.
- chooks
Is there a particular scenario where Attributes would be useful (other than brand new shiny feature)? Not being a dick here -- it just seems like
if (instanceof Foo) { doSomethingConcrete() }
Is fairly straightforward. Attributes could give you a richer set of things to inspect, but maybe at the cost of a level of indirection that could cause more problems in the long run. Is there a particular area where this would be useful? Just curious, as my imagination has hit the wall after 14 hours at work...
1) Update the email address to all be the company CEO's email address.
2) Run the tests and flood his/her mailbox.
3) Apply the Peter Principle and get promoted.
4) Profit!
- chooks
@KattMan said:
I will relate this same attitude to the Amazon e-reader, they are the only ones that require you to upload to thier website in order to get anthing on thier reader
That's actually not true. With USB (or drop-box, which you can sideload through USB) you can put whatever you want on there without sending it to amazon. Amazon has this "send to kindle" thing for trying to make it "easier" to get stuff loaded on your kindle, but you don't have to use it. In fact, dropbox is what I use 90% of the time.
- chooks