naonintendois

joined 2 years ago
[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 19 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

You have to ask for proof of ownership from the debt collectors. Sometimes all they have is your info in a spreadsheet, which is not enough to legally collect. Do some online searches and you should be able to finda lot of resources.

Those characters are pronounced ha-neul, not whatever heáo is.

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Best ones I know of are maker's muse and teaching tech

There is still a lot of racism in America. I would not be surprised if I saw that from an American politician.

Not me, but a friend of mine pronounces rhinoceros as if it rhymes with dinosaur-us.

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)
[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 12 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Gaming is catching up. Valve has done a tremendous job getting games supported with Proton on SteamOS

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 71 points 2 months ago (16 children)

The author has no clue how spending works in cloud environments nor why it's so complicated to calculate. This is a pretty uniformed article.

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 13 points 2 months ago

70k is likely way underpaid for dealing with COBOL. I've heard of people making 200k for being on-call

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 11 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I-4 was much easier to drive for me than I-95 in Miami. I have never seen worse drivers.

[–] naonintendois@programming.dev 4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

You can have a memory leak when items are still in scope in some loop or when you have a reference count cycle. The latter happens with the Rc/Arc types in rust.

An example for the former can be a web server that keeps track of every request it's ever received in memory. You will eventually run out of memory. But you did not violate any memory rules (dangling pointer, etc.). Memory leaks can be caused by design issues.

 

Cross posting since I thought some people in this community (anyone soldering their own boards) might also appreciate this trick.

 

Cross posting since I thought people in this community might also appreciate this trick.

 

I just came across this and thought I'd share. I've struggled to get headers and IC's off boards after soldering them on backwards/upside down. This video shows a cool trick with a piece of copper wire that makes them very easy and quick to get off without expensive tooling. I was thoroughly impressed. Hope someone else finds this useful too.

view more: next ›