I have a bad sense of direction IRL but an excellent sense of direction in games. I don’t think it necessarily transfers.
I have a bad sense of direction IRL but an excellent sense of direction in games. I don’t think it necessarily transfers.
Anything that challenges the status quo is inevitably going to make some people uncomfortable.
So instead of ‘up’ and ‘down’, you have a clickable emoji-menu like list of tags like ‘interesting’, ‘boring’, ‘funny’, ‘WTF!?’, ‘Quality’, ‘Trash’, ‘Educational’, ‘CAT’, etc…
I’m not sure about this. How do you decide which qualities users can rate? How do you ensure those qualities work across instances with different languages / cultures? You’re also taking something which is extremely low effort and making it take significantly more time and effort. I think the simplicity, universality, and low effort of upvote / downvote are all strengths.
1 core developer and 199 other people trying to figure out how they can extract more money from users
I cook Jamie Oliver’s “basic tarka dhal” all the time. It doesn’t take that much time in my experience, and being a basic recipe it lends itself to lots of variations. Highly recommend.
https://www.jamieoliver.com/features/lentils-and-basic-tarka-dhal-recipe/
I’ve always felt that pair programming is more useful on early stages of a task, where there is enough doubt about implementation details and discussing them is worth.
Is pair programming the right way to address unknowns around implementation? It seems like a brainstorming / whiteboarding session might be a better fit.
I use GitHub Desktop for 95% of my git needs, terminal for the other 5%
Can’t imagine how Boost would survive when many more successful third-party apps are going under.
This is epic level malicious compliance. Best way to run a SFW sub into the ground is opening it up to NSFW content.
It’s not just fentanyl. I remember a lot of news about the “opioid epidemic” before fentanyl was a story.
If you want to avoid counting towards reddit’s traffic, take a look at LibReddit / LibRedirect
https://github.com/libreddit/libreddit
https://libredirect.github.io