I have never had an answer to that question. I am sure this varies by person but is that a terrible thing or a sign that something is wrong?
I have made radical and life-altering changes in the last year and I can see how bad my life had gotten but I still have no answer for the question about what I would like to be doing professionally in 5 years time.
I have an answer to that question : ) In 5 years, I want to save up and retire from the goddamn rat race, like Mr Money Mustache. It's probably not what every hiring manager wants to hear, but it's the truth!
I loved the different ideas to throw the bot off like pulling creeps in a way that would not work for a human. Slacks' courier strategy was entertaining as well.
I don't know enough (no more than a layperson) about AI to have any meaningful comment there. Do they need to train the bot on every hero the same way or does it only need to relearn the hero specifics (and not items/strategies)?
Another thing I noticed. Others talked about it using API etc etc so that means that you can't visually trick it by stopping an attack mid animation like you can with human players right?
I think so. My blog is a mix of everything (personal, technical, random). It is a really good way to learn to be a better communicator. Especially when you have trouble keeping thoughts in order.
It also takes time to get better at writing in general so (IMO) the sooner you start the better.
I never consider myself an expert (in anything), even though I think I am competent and get paid to work so clearly my skills are of use.
I have a fire stick (gifted to me) and the twitch app on it is awful. Bad enough that even I noticed. As far as I can tell there is no way to filter the videos by language/region like I can on the desktop.
The videos are displayed in 'current viewers' descending order and I have to scroll for a while and hope that the stream title has enough info to guess at the language (I don't have favorite streamers, I will watch whoever).
I haven't found a way around this in the months I have had it and half the time I use the youtube app and watch a pre-recorded game instead.
No you don't. Email addresses explicitly require any periods in the domain to have at least one (non-period) character after the period. From RFC 5322, the relevant grammar production for the domain looks like
dot-atom-text = 1*atext *("." 1*atext)
(where atext is letters, digits, or a set of specific punctuation characters that doesn't include periods).
Ah, I wasn't aware that email addresses defined that differently. it looks like it's also the same way as part of obs-domain as defined by the addr-spec part of that. RFC 822 also seems to say the same thing, it's been way too long since i've tried to read those RFCs.
Software Developer (mainly web). Full time. Sole developer in a 3-4 person department. Our consulting company (15-20 persons) was recently acquired by a much larger (1300 persons) but hasn't had an affect on us (yet).
[05:30 or [06:00] - wake up
[06:00]-[07:00] - make coffee and watch tv while I work out
[07:00] or [0715] - shower
[08:00] get to office (5 minute drive)
[08:15] - wait for my computer to finish starting up and be usable
[08:15]-[11:30] - work on assigned tickets, could be projects or bug-fixes or client meetings or anything in between
[11:30] - [12:30] - go home and make a sandwich for lunch, try to have a ~30 min nap
[12:30] - [17:00] - more assigned work
[17:00]-[23:00] - usually gaming and dinner, sometimes tv, errands
[23:00]-[05:30] - sleep, variable from 22:00-00:00 but consistent wake time.
Emails and chat are open all day. Not used much so it's not really a distraction.
Some days I get to work 15 mins early and then I wait until Friday and leave early. I am one of 2-3 people who is here after 4:30 pm.
Most of the work is integrating custom functionality into the Umbraco CMS. Sometimes I get to write stand-alone apps though, which is nice. I get to do all the code and SQL and half the time figure out IIS stuff. We also support many clients that have outdated systems (ASP, ColdFusion) but those are usually bug-fixes to keep them running as best we can.
Ever since the acquisition there has been very few days where there is enough work to fill a whole day (many many very big projects are just sitting at various stages of approval/planning/etc).
When I don't have enough work to do I build out functionality on my site or write an article. I do the coding here and we have a designer so I am getting to learn a lot more about CSS and layout that I don't get to do usually. Very rarely I will just pick up a tutorial to work through. My site has taken enough time to get to where it is that this is pretty rare.
To some people it sounds great but I would like to have consistent work and coworkers who I can actually talk to, even though we all are in cubicles next to each other, we are not a communicative group and the designer wants nothing to do with code (even though I'd like to get cross trained on design work). I've never been part of a code review and it's depressing not getting feedback about anything.
I very strongly considered it. Or just walking (3 miles). The two hold ups are that I don't want to turn up to work all sweaty (or wet, or frozen etc) and to a lesser extent carrying all my stuff (purse, wallet, coffee, lunch).
Also going home for lunch is highly convenient and I really like that nap.
I wouldn't have to bike/walk every day of course. I am still considering it (clearly).
I'd certainly try it out for a day or two a week, backpack / jersey pockets for stuff.. easier if you have a locker or showers at your work. Hopefully you wouldn't arrive too sweaty after 3 miles which should take you about ~15 minutesish.
Win-win though, exercise and if you get in to it less fuel costs. Could easily clock up 30 miles a week and extend your route on nice days.. no brainer!
Just because you can't age doesn't mean you can't die. I think if people started living forever there would be a lot of rebellion from the people who are not given that access. Assuming at that point they can't just use brute force to protect themselves from the masses.
Exactly; the whole point is that there is not a free market here. Like I said, ISPs are a cartel.
It's funny, since these corporate goblins and their government lackeys spout bullshit about free market and competition and innovation and blah blah blah whenever someone asks them to justify their blatantly anti-consumer maneuvering (or something tangentially related).
I have never had an answer to that question. I am sure this varies by person but is that a terrible thing or a sign that something is wrong?
I have made radical and life-altering changes in the last year and I can see how bad my life had gotten but I still have no answer for the question about what I would like to be doing professionally in 5 years time.