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Thank you for sharing your story, that was an interesting perspective of the practical side of light body implants.

The API looks genuinely nice to use. I wonder if this could be used as an inspiration/base for on of the programming languages aimed at expressing/creating music.

Yes, their NAND division has been sold, it is now mostly under solidigm. Maybe solidigm could bring it back, but it seems unlikely (given the previous commercial failure).

Ime, some shrinkage is inevitably if you wash with reasonably hot temperatures. Reasonable ~ following the washing instructions. Most mid to high end tshirts are pre-shrunk however which helps a lot, low end shirts (maybe some conference swag?) can skip this step for cost reasons.

It might be an interesting idea given that the Steam Deck has reasonable amount of RAM/GPU. The main issue for a knowledge base might be the lack of a physical keyboard though.

It has built in microphones though.

Somewhere in the net of tubes of our AC we have a machine that produces rocks. They randomly shoot of the air vents, please install ballistic shields in front of the vents to stop them from hitting our customers.

The pelxiglas is cheaper than taking the system down…

Same here, there are some pain points with swaywm (notably screen sharing is only per display, DisplayLink support and screen mirroring is a pain). Most of these points however are IME a worthwhile tradeoff. Sway has also been astoundingly stable (compared to gnome or KDE)


Thank you for pointing that out, I'm looking forward to this release a lot then

> I can't remember the last time I had an issue

Depending on your workflows the comment just described three issues


Kde has been stable too So much more than x11 kde

Maybe this is just a question of taste but I never could get along with Javas (or Kotlin's) tooling.

Primarily working in Vim/Helix works for most languages from Nix to Typescript or Rust and C, but Java just never worked quite right. It also generally felt like it had a worse story around tooling from a DX perspective, something like Golang or even npm feels a lot lighter than the molasses of JDK management and gradle et al.


> Maybe this is just a question of taste but I never could get along with Javas (or Kotlin's) tooling

Are you joking? IntelliJ is without a doubt the best dev tooling environment available.


No, I'm not. Through university (and even before) I have access to their full suite. I have tried to use PyCharm, GoLand and Idea.

Idea was useful for Java but felt quite slow and even with vim bindings was a pain to navigate. Learning the shortcuts helped but it never got quite as fast as helix/vim for general editing (especially as my work usually is a polyglot). It might be the best for Java (compared to eclipse or bluej) but that does not mean it fits my workflow/way of work.

PyCharm/GoLand both are "nice" but it did not feel better/more efficient than pylance/pyright)/gopls + vscode/helix. The only I still occasionally use is DataStorm as it is quite a nice SQLite/PostgreSQL client.

edit: fixed typo from gostorm -> goland


GoStorm?

Thanks for noticing the typo, must've mixed up the PHP and Golang IDEs

Besides doing yourself a disservice of not using a proper IDE, what exactly makes Java not writeable in vim or the like? Like it's a pretty simple language with not much magic going on.

It is there to ensure an animal is not experimented on unnecessarily or with excessive pain. Discussing a process like this might require you to slightly look further than one mostly clear cut case.

Part of his filings will be actually stating the "terminally ill" part and having this approved by an ethics committee. Making a moral judgment here is the committee's actual role as not all cases are so "simple".


That entire 3 months process?

It could have been a single informal paper that says "the animal is terminally ill, my judgement call is that this is unlikely to cause excessive suffering and might help instead, even if the chances are low, and if my judgement is proven wrong and this appears to cause excessive suffering the animal will be put down humanely". Signed by the veterinarian and the owner.

Because the system is high speed low drag, and trusts the veterinarian and the owner to make reasonably good calls about pet health and suffering - unless proven otherwise by overwhelming evidence. The system trusts people by default, and that 3 months long process and an ethics board come into play when there's a suspicion that this trust may have been abused.

Of course, that's not the world we live in. Which is why we're having this conversation.


Likely the same as in most other countries: fines, further orders and eventually criminal prosecution.

when you go before a jury of your peers for having illegal solar panels on your roof, what will they say?

A solar farm isn't a few panels on your roof, it's a large installation in a field.

Also in the UK it would probably be a civil lawsuit, which doesn't have a jury, although if you violate a civil court order you can still get a jail sentence.


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