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I made 2 more attempts and got it to change the direction: https://chatgpt.com/share/680b4c39-2f1c-8010-b577-b23f63081d...

Thanks! This was a nice short read.


Location: Kenya

Remote: Yes

Willing to relocate: Yes, but not now

Technologies: Python, Django, React

CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1VlGXa8myCda-vP6Gyx_E73FRVEm...

Email: In CV


A big no no for me. Seen a couple of sites and never tried clicking. I'd rather use the 'sign in with google' button where I get to confirm rather this privacy insensitive method.


To disable this feature (at least for chrome 69, not sure if it will change), go to account-consistency: chrome://flags/#account-consistency and select disable.


This no longer works in Chrome Canary (71).

EDIT: to be clear you can configure the setting, but it's not respected anymore.

Former Chrome engineer confirming my report here: https://twitter.com/ericlaw/status/1043861647247515649.


This is deeply troubling.


Taxify already has a rider feature in Nairobi, Kenya, called Boda within their app. It's insanely cheap and the ability to circumvent traffic is a huge plus. I'm happy this is coming to Uber as well.


Nice. A quick suggestion: would you allow users to select there time zones and then show the schedule based on a user's timezone?


Hey Baloob. Will you be implementing access control levels anytime soon?


A few of my favorite: 1. SE Radio 2. Software Engineering Daily 3. Full Stack Radio


Dell EqualLogic™ and EqualLogic-branded products, Dell|EMC, EMC and VCE-branded products, Dell Compellent™ and Compellent-branded products, Dell KACE™ and KACE-branded products, Dell Force10™ and Force10-branded products, PowerVault ML6000 tape libraries, PowerVault DL and DR products, Dell SonicWALL™ and SonicWALL-branded products, Dell Wyse™ and Wyse-branded products, Dell Quest™, Quest™, ScriptLogic™ and VKernel™ branded products, Dell Software branded products, Dell Data Protection | Rapid Recovery and Dell Data Protection | Rapid Recovery branded products, Dell StatSoft and StatSoft-branded products, non-Dell-branded enterprise products, enterprise software, and customized products may not be returned at any time.

[http://www.dell.com/learn/us/en/uscorp1/solutions/us-return-...]


Seriously, Dell has no excuse for how ridiculously buried this information is. Let's take these terms and stick them where they actually belong, right next to all the other crap they make me agree to EVERY time I purchase something:

http://i.imgur.com/MTOujSd.jpg

Was that so hard, Dell? Was it?


Well, let's be honest - Dell has no excuse for not allowing returns on these items. That's unbelievable, tbh. One of the reasons I buy most of this kind of stuff from Amazon.


How is it even legal? Consumer protection laws are a thing in tons of countries specifically to stop companies exploiting people with eg, unfair refund policies... Steam/Valve recently learned that the hard way in Australia, Apple in Europe etc.


The product mentioned are expensive entreprisey products, mostly sold business-to-business.

The europeans laws offer little protection to companies. Consumer laws apply only when selling directly to consumers.


But you probably wouldn't have bought it, then! They need to get rid of stock, obviously in whatever fashion they can.


This simply can't be legal in the EU, can it?


In the EU the consumer is protected to a degree. In any case from what I gather we are looking here at a B2B and not B2C transaction. In B2B land company can get away legally with other terms as it is assumed they are dealing on more equal terms.


That's crazy. 90% of random eBay sellers take returns. I would never have expected Dell to pull shit like this.


Thats why after 8 years, i have 100+ reviews, with 100% feedback. shit i should put that on a resume.


There are certainly worse things you could put on a resume. It sounds silly at first, but I'd feel better about hiring someone who had hundreds or thousands of satisfied customers with few or no unhappy ones.


It may be for protection of other customers. A bad actor could order some of those devices, flash the firmware with an evil version(or somehow modify it), and then send it back to dell.


(Shrug) So send it back to the factory for reconditioning. Charge the customer a reasonable restocking fee to cover the associated costs, if it happens enough to be a problem.

What? The factory can't restore the firmware to as-new condition? That's a bit of a problem in itself, isn't it?


It was just a guess - I have no real idea why Dell wouldn't allow returns on those items. And firmware was just an example. You could also solder in a completely separate computer if you really wanted to. Then you need to open the whole thing up and do visual inspections, reflash the firmware, test it, etc. It may not be worth it for $500, or cost close enough to $500 that they just don't allow returns.


As someone who spent too many years at a Sonic Wall competitor, we always completely wiped the boxes we got back.


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