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Agreed, I have been doing this for years without consequences so far

You're not a real programmer if you don't have a "I vibe code AI slop in NextJS" sticker on your MacBook

I'm also very disappointed with the Airpods Pro 3

I use them mainly for running, and after I accidentally put my Pro 2s through a washer/dryer cycle, I ordered the Pro 3s, but I've noticed they feel heavier in the ears and make this annoying loud thumping sound every time my foot hits the ground, making them almost unusable for my primary purpose

Also sometimes I fall asleep in bed with them while listening to a podcast, and have experienced the same painfully loud screeching as described by the article when the microphones brush against the pillow


> where restaurants ask first if you have allergies

Pretty common expectation in many countries. I was surprised to see this is not normally a thing in the US, given how we're led to believe how much you guys love to sue each other.


I have never been asked such a thing, in the US or elsewhere. It would be on the customer to inform the staff of any allergies.


Five years ago it was a rarity (in fact the first place I can clearly recall being asked was a Five Guys, when I said I didn't want a bun - no gluten problems, thanks, just don't need the extra calories). Nowadays I'd say it's more common than not at full-service restaurants.

Southern US; I live in a modest-size metro of about 400k and spend plenty of time in bigger cities.


> Pretty common expectation in many countries.

I've been to 40+ countries and not once have I been asked about allergies at a restaurant or food shop (i.e., ice cream, etc.)


I'd say I am asked this question at about half of the restaurants I eat at in the US (in the northeast.)


I don't have experience in many countries, but e.g. in Germany, while everything is labeled according to law, I have never heard anyone asking. I think the persons with allergies know this well themselves.


Not sure, but there's a funny saga about sesame in bread cause of lawsuits here


I like to actually checkout the branch I'm reviewing and run the code myself to observe if it does what is claimed, that usually takes up at least 10 minutes in itself, sometimes more.

From my experience most of the issues I find are actually from this type of observation rather than actually reading the code and imagining what it does in my head.


the mind remains a poor compiler ;p


If he truly believes that, he should have no problem disclosing all of his private and personal messages and emails to us, for everyone to see on the internet.

The truth is that this is just another corrupt politician.


The thing is, politicians will be exempt from the rules proposed by this chat control legislation.

"*EU politicians exempt themselves from this surveillance under "professional secrecy" rules."

source: https://fightchatcontrol.eu/


Probably better for you guys that UK is out now, our government would have been salivating at the thought of spying on every citizen without repercussions


It's one of the reasons they wanted out. Theresa May was very explicit that she considered the European Court of Human Rights an obstacle.


The UK got what they wanted. Apple still hasn't reenabled ADP so iCloud backups are available for snooping.


In some countries you're not allowed to call them milk, for example, in the UK a judge ruled that they must be called something like "oat drink" instead.


Which actually makes sense. If it's not coming from a mammal's mammary glands, it's not milk!

Calling it milk IS deceptive marketing.


they'd not be calling their product milk, it would just be the name of their domain. you don't buy amazons at amazon.com


It has shitty LPDDR4X memory


LPDDR4X 96GB or 48GB, total bandwidth 408GB/s

Support for ECC

@150Watts


I'm a big fan of Toxiproxy for these kinds of things:

https://github.com/Shopify/toxiproxy


I do networked game development on Windows and I've found the clumsy program to be very valuable to simulate adverse network conditions. You can set it up to simulate arbitrary network latency, packet loss and so forth.

https://jagt.github.io/clumsy/


You can use the tc command from the netem package for those wondering how to achieve this on Linux. https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/tc-netem.8.html


I've used `tc` about three times in the last 15 years. Every time I have to relearn it.


+1 for clumsy On Windows I've also used Heavy Load, Netlimiter for more fine-grained control and Microsoft's Driver Verifier.


This looks interesting. I'll check it out, thank you!


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