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False
|
thenuge26
|
t2_5fvbj
|
RIP good luck on your move to California
| null |
0
|
1544104431
|
False
|
0
|
eb7n6d0
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7fjqe
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7n6d0/
|
1547091913
|
11
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nsiivola
|
t2_3hzwt
|
...well.
Imagine Knuth saying. "I want to write a series of books on the Art of Computer Programming. Oh, wait, let me write a typesetting program first. Oh, wait, let me invent an entirely new style of programming first in order to write the typesetting program. Oh, wait, I need to write the compiler for this first..."
...except you don't have to imagine. ;)
| null |
0
|
1545256647
|
False
|
0
|
ec52j63
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec43pjb
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec52j63/
|
1547821980
|
15
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
gmoore789
|
t2_dzolpl9
|
So far, zero, sadly. Still holding out hope.
| null |
0
|
1544104510
|
False
|
0
|
eb7n9dl
|
t3_a3moqk
| null | null |
t1_eb7mk0u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3moqk/90_days_of_aws_eks_in_production/eb7n9dl/
|
1547091950
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Rythoka
|
t2_4sb3h
|
Personally I don't have a problem with side effects, even if they happen in a weird place, as long as they're documented somewhere useful and preferably are abstracted into their own function. Just let me be able to see that it happens!
Too bad that never happens.
| null |
0
|
1545256654
|
False
|
0
|
ec52jia
|
t3_a7arbt
| null | null |
t1_ec429rd
|
/r/programming/comments/a7arbt/how_to_write_perfect_python_commandline_interfaces/ec52jia/
|
1547821984
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
Mssql developer here. Does anyone have a good explanation of why postgres is better than mssql?
​
I've looked for articles on this a bunch of times. I always end up either not understanding the features or seeing a bunch of stuff mssql already has.
| null |
0
|
1544104515
|
False
|
0
|
eb7n9l3
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t3_a3dobm
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb7n9l3/
|
1547091953
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
zzbzq
|
t2_2a2oo
|
Since many of the comments in this thread may not have read the article, they present some evidence why they think it's intentional.
In one case, allegedly they had optimized video speed in edge to be faster, but then YouTube made bizarre pointless changes to their html which slowed down edge, and was then followed immediately by marketing campaign promoting Chrome as the fastest.
Not provable, but certainly more compelling and detailed than the speculation you presented that the intern just jumped to conclusions.
| null |
0
|
1545256657
|
False
|
0
|
ec52jn2
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4cabr
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec52jn2/
|
1547821986
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ledasll
|
t2_h00pz
|
as you said - it's enforced programatically, so it can be "deforced" as well. And if anything like this would happen, it wouldn't be done by programmer it self, company would get order from gov institution to remove barriers for developers that work on "XXXX" software (including code reviews). And then it's up to company to argue that they can't done because it will weaken bla bla bla or just accept and let checking code without reviews (and probably without tests) hopping that it won't crash on release. But that probably wouldn't be enough, they also would need to secure that anyone else can't read code, because anyone who looks at commit history would see if something was done..
But it's really unlikely that they would force single developer to do something fishy and not tell anyone about that, it's much easier to find company/department that will gladly do that and then just arrange work in such way, that developers work on different parts and really have no idea about end solution.
| null |
1
|
1544104561
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nbet
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7hs0q
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nbet/
|
1547091975
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
VernorVinge93
|
t2_2amyhthy
|
Pretty sure Gmail is just crazy slow and Google has more time to optimise the chrome side code running it than Firefox or really anyone.
But even with all that it should not need so much CPU or ram to read my email.
| null |
0
|
1545256687
|
False
|
0
|
ec52l3i
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec42c76
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec52l3i/
|
1547822004
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
OneWingedShark
|
t2_bx7wh
|
When you have a strict separation between prototype and releasable product -- one guy was mentioning how his company did this by having one language for prototype and one for production with the prototype language strictly forbidden on the production side.
| null |
0
|
1544104581
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nc6h
|
t3_a3grvx
| null | null |
t1_eb63mlo
|
/r/programming/comments/a3grvx/your_prototype_just_became_your_product_now_what/eb7nc6h/
|
1547091985
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
WillAdams
|
t2_d6xe7
|
To a great degree, the early parts of his books were just a retelling of the Wars of the Roses, w/ different names, and some geography and season changes, plus dragons.
| null |
0
|
1545256710
|
False
|
0
|
ec52m7h
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec4c1oq
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec52m7h/
|
1547822018
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
This_Is_The_End
|
t2_86z0g
|
This is going to be funny with trust in online banking.
| null |
0
|
1544104735
|
False
|
0
|
eb7ni95
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7ni95/
|
1547092059
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ascii
|
t2_g70u
|
Because MongoDB isn't exactly famous for *not* losing your data.
| null |
0
|
1545256736
|
False
|
0
|
ec52neu
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec52neu/
|
1547822033
|
19
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Bomaruto
|
t2_u6bjr
|
Different countries have different sentences for major crimes. And something you could get 3 years for in Australia you might have gotten 10 years in the US.
Those are just numbers pulled out of my ass, but the point is that you cannot judge the severity of a crime just by looking at the sentence length in a vacuum.
| null |
0
|
1544104765
|
False
|
0
|
eb7njfq
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7gflw
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7njfq/
|
1547092074
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ggtsu_00
|
t2_72fwy
|
OSes were pretty lightweight back then though. Windows had no issues running DOS on top of it.
| null |
0
|
1545256744
|
False
|
0
|
ec52nt2
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec3oe4u
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec52nt2/
|
1547822037
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ChildishJack
|
t2_x2e7p
|
I too think I am better than others for making my life harder than it needs to be
| null |
0
|
1544104767
|
False
|
0
|
eb7njig
|
t3_a3lvtr
| null | null |
t1_eb7mgva
|
/r/programming/comments/a3lvtr/c20_standard_ranges_eric_niebler/eb7njig/
|
1547092075
|
34
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ivquatch
|
t2_3a6gu
|
F# actually has several JS transpilers. Fable's implementation is quite good, though. It compiles to Babel rather than plain JS. The project also goes to great lengths to integrate well into the existing JS ecosystem as opposed to .net's. The community is quite active as well with its own Fable Conf.
I personally can't speak to scala.js, clojure script, or haskell's JS transpilers, but Fable sets the bar pretty high relative to other transpilers I've used.
| null |
0
|
1545256784
|
False
|
0
|
ec52plt
|
t3_a7aua9
| null | null |
t1_ec23nuu
|
/r/programming/comments/a7aua9/why_you_should_learn_f/ec52plt/
|
1547822059
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
OneNeptune
|
t2_13gojy
|
They got their programming info from CSI tv shows or something.
| null |
0
|
1544104768
|
False
|
0
|
eb7njjt
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7jowl
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7njjt/
|
1547092075
|
50
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
VernorVinge93
|
t2_2amyhthy
|
Http2 should improve the situation right?
| null |
0
|
1545256836
|
False
|
0
|
ec52rzk
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4b027
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec52rzk/
|
1547822089
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
SuperRandomExplosion
|
t2_7bsjj
|
I hope they also ban code reviews
| null |
0
|
1544104802
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nkz3
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7fjqe
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nkz3/
|
1547092094
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
lazyant
|
t2_3akc
|
That’s an oversimplification, articles actually fit well with a relational database since schema is fixed (article, author, date etc) , the “document store” is more a way to describe how things are stored and queried rather than is good especially for storing actual documents.
| null |
0
|
1545256837
|
False
|
0
|
ec52s17
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec52s17/
|
1547822090
|
101
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Comrade_Hodgkinson
|
t2_rn4in5h
|
I'll let you in on a secret, the "/s" indicates sarcasm.
| null |
0
|
1544104809
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nl9c
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7ivd6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nl9c/
|
1547092097
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
13steinj
|
t2_i487l
|
I like click as an option, but it has a variety of issues. Mainly
* decorator hell is an easy trap to fall into
* it has some super strange issues with system locales, so getting a click based cli to work from systemd or upstart or whatever will bring you hell.
For the last one I was working on fixing my system for 3 days and then out of nowhere it started working and I still don't know why.
| null |
0
|
1545256837
|
False
|
0
|
ec52s20
|
t3_a7arbt
| null | null |
t1_ec2v56z
|
/r/programming/comments/a7arbt/how_to_write_perfect_python_commandline_interfaces/ec52s20/
|
1547822090
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
simo9445
|
t2_ttw2w
|
Good, that's good.
| null |
0
|
1544104809
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nl9e
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nl9e/
|
1547092097
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
AngularBeginner
|
t2_eky8x
|
Even cheap flights are not worth flying with Ryanair.
| null |
0
|
1545256844
|
False
|
0
|
ec52sbg
|
t3_a7qjey
| null | null |
t3_a7qjey
|
/r/programming/comments/a7qjey/ryanair_hamiltonian_cycles_and_using_graph_theory/ec52sbg/
|
1547822093
|
26
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
vytah
|
t2_52x2f
|
This.
In modern terms, it's like arguing about whether to implement 128-bit integers as `struct u128 {uint64_t hi; uint64_t lo;};` or `struct u128 {uint64_t lo; uint64_t hi;};`. On modern little-endian machines the former would be middle-endian and the latter would be little-endian, but there's not much practical difference to those representations, maybe little-endian would be a tiny bit faster, but the overall code handling those would very similar.
And if somehow the Linux kernel started using the first layout, you wouldn't call x64 a middle-endian machine.
| null |
0
|
1544104848
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nmsb
|
t3_a3juw0
| null | null |
t1_eb784e1
|
/r/programming/comments/a3juw0/til_nuxi_is_another_way_to_describe_endianess/eb7nmsb/
|
1547092116
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nsiivola
|
t2_3hzwt
|
Witness MIT moving away from SICP some years back because it gave students an overly idealistic/optimistic view of comprehensibility of the software stack...
| null |
0
|
1545256902
|
False
|
0
|
ec52uxn
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec4yyk3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec52uxn/
|
1547822125
|
14
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Jalfor
|
t2_7bf8e
|
I agree that the law is absurdly far reaching, without enough safeguards in place, however, you are actually allowed to disclose the request for the purposes of acquiring legal advice. From the bill:
> A person covered by paragraph (1)(b) may disclose technical assistance notice information, technical capability notice
information or technical assistance request information...for the purpose of obtaining legal advice in relation to this
Part.
where a "person covered in 1b" refers to an awful lot of people, but importantly, "a designated communications provider" and "an employee of a designated communications provider".
| null |
0
|
1544104908
|
False
|
0
|
eb7np2q
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7kf1m
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7np2q/
|
1547092145
|
47
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
JabNX
|
t2_hqje4
|
First of all, using React does not equates to using Redux, and thank god for that because otherwise I'd probably be doing something else during my work hours (and not for the lack of trying).
In any case, I fail to see how any of the things you cite are at odds with each other. DI might academically be an OO technique, in the end it's just a system where your component is only loosely coupled with its dependencies and relies on an external system to get them. I hope it looks familiar to you because you use this every day with Redux and a lot of other React librairies with HoC and things of the sort. Using `connect` on a component to get some data from the main store is a form of DI, albeit severely crippled by the fact that React forces you to use props to pass anything to a component, be it some actual "attributes" that can change from direct usage, or some immutable dependencies that will stay the same. The Redux store could be one of those immutable dependencies, because while its contents will change, while you will always be treating its data as immutable, the actual store is unique.
React can't sadly "react" out of anything that isn't directly coming from props (or worse: state), so you're pretty much stuck with a mess where everything is mixed together at the same level, even if some of it comes from Redux, React-router, the actual props, and so on. This is why you use MobX instead of Redux or anything else because it shatters the limitations and allows you to organize your state as you see fit, or rather as it makes the more sense.
DI isn't at all limited to things that hold state, as a matter of fact I'd very much like to use DI to get API clients inside components (at whatever required level of abstraction). Using props and HoC/Context for things like this is way too much setup for my liking (especially since I am not forced to use them for state) and adds way too much noise. Getting the props interface right is a nightmare because the external component API is different from the internal one. Old-style context (that sort of came back with "static contextType") is the closest we can be to an ideal solution, but it's way too limited because you would need to build your own "ServiceLocator" and inject it everywhere (blocking the only contextType you have btw). And for those who are familiar with OO concepts, this is exactly how you shouldn't do DI, this is like one of the most obvious anti-pattern there is.
With proper DI I could just list in the constructor (React components are all objects, even the function ones btw) what I need and the container with give me what I want. Or I could give what I want manually if I need to write some tests. Again, this is similar to using props, but a whole lot cleaner.
In the end, I just import stuff and use it directly in the components that need them and I don't test, because I can't, and I'd rather pay the cost of the eventual bugs I or other people find while doing manual testing. I spend a whole lot less time developing and my code is way simpler (and easy to debug) this way, so that's a tradeoff I'd take every day. But proper DI would allow me to open up my components for testing for cheap, so I'd be using it.
| null |
0
|
1545256922
|
False
|
0
|
ec52vwh
|
t3_a7lho8
| null | null |
t1_ec4y0dg
|
/r/programming/comments/a7lho8/reasons_why_vuejs_is_getting_more_traction_every/ec52vwh/
|
1547822138
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
m50d
|
t2_6q02y
|
> Nobody has ever solved a real world problem with a relational database....
Relations are useful. Datastores are useful. ACID implemented solely at the data layer isn't. (Indeed many of those real-world problems solved with relational databases were solved with early versions of MySQL, which was notorious for not having any real ACID implementation).
> You mean event sourcing and/or CQRS? These actually benefit a lot from serial transaction isolation.
What are you talking about? Much of the point is that you form a CRDT for your event log and don't need any kind of transaction isolation, much less serializable.
| null |
0
|
1544104959
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nr1r
|
t3_a3dobm
| null | null |
t1_eb7loeo
|
/r/programming/comments/a3dobm/at_22_years_old_postgres_might_just_be_the_most/eb7nr1r/
|
1547092169
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
angry_wombat
|
t2_39bys
|
Just tried, I think Firefox is faster than Chrome is Gmail. Any difference probably isn't malicious, just developed and tested against Chrome. Like Microsoft Azure running great in IE & Edge but crap in Chrome.
| null |
0
|
1545256944
|
False
|
0
|
ec52wtz
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec42c76
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec52wtz/
|
1547822150
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
Not reinventing the wheel = monoculture now. ¯\\\_(ツ)\_/¯
| null |
0
|
1544104996
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nsii
|
t3_a3htqg
| null | null |
t3_a3htqg
|
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb7nsii/
|
1547092216
|
6
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
virtually_bindok
|
t2_1n6syo4l
|
From what I gather, it isn't MongoDB that's the issue. They are still interested in JSONB features of PostgreSQL. To quote from the article :
> OpsManager didn’t really deliver on its promise of hassle-free database management
Plus the cost and having to manage their own instance of opsmanager was an issue.
| null |
0
|
1545256989
|
False
|
0
|
ec52ytk
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec52ytk/
|
1547822174
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
malkarouri
|
t2_3dgi4
|
Have I seen a consistent religion? Other than Lisp, none.
Let us look at the rest of your response:
- The fact that Python adds a lot of constructs was not trying to demonstrate that they are good. It was supposed to demonstrate that the Zen religion does not hinder that. Even if you think it is bikeshedding, it invalidates your claims about the Zen
- Not recognising that Perl has an ideology (the one line is one for example) shows your bias.
- Resisting FP has nothing to do with the Zen. It has to do with Guido and his absolute power. I did acknowledge that, but you seem too hellbent on blaming the Zen for everything including the next economic crisis. Check the threads.
- Switch (I would prefer general pattern matching) is certainly not managed by the Zen. The problem with that was always a practical one: trying to get a syntax that works with other existing things. Here is where the lack of metaprogramming capabilities show.
In fact, the switch statement issue is captured in https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3103/. It doesn’t refer to the Zen or any of its points at all, and it says clearly that the lack of a good design is the issue. Saying that the switch statement is unpythonic is refuted by that.
- The goto statement is also an issue of structured programming and has been resisted since Dijkstra’s famous article. Python is neither the first nor the most used language or most taught to prevent goto. Arguing about the lack of goto when it is not even encouraged in Lisp circles is nonsense.
Python’s current metaprogramming capabilities are actually bigger than Java’s even now. Counting Javascript transpilers as metaprogramming is a huge misunderstanding or misinterpretation of transpilers. They don’t make macros or new user defined control structs possible; they support new versions of the language. Ruby yes has a higher culture of metaprogramming than Python, but trying to even compare Java and Python in terms of metaprogramming is obviously a joke.
Speaking about code generation, code generation is way bigger in Python than Java, and its run time introspection is also bigger. Check the amount of tools that create modules and/or classes at run time. Comparing ORMs in Python and Java would make that clear. At this point it is becoming quite apparent that you simply don’t know Python metaprogramming capabilities. So I will stop here.
| null |
0
|
1544104999
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nsn1
|
t3_a2hpd8
| null | null |
t1_eb7f888
|
/r/programming/comments/a2hpd8/is_lisp_a_good_language_to_start_learning_as_a/eb7nsn1/
|
1547092218
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
devraj7
|
t2_yhtpo
|
> Ever since Java added annotations, more libraries/frameworks have descended down the path of "spooky action at a distance"
XML is the spooky action at a distance.
It's a string typed configuration file that modifies the logic and semantics of your code. If you look at the source code, you really have no idea what's going to happen.
At least annotations are in the source code, and statically typed.
If the metadata applies to an element in your source code (method, class, package, variable), then it belongs in an annotation.
If the metadata is not tied to source code (host name, database coordinates, connection pool, etc...), then an external configuration file is a better choice (and XML has advantages there, over alternatives such as JSON).
| null |
0
|
1545257048
|
False
|
0
|
ec531ga
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec4s6d8
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec531ga/
|
1547822207
|
14
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
fireork12
|
t2_mo4mk
|
Spoiiillllerrrsss
| null |
0
|
1544105047
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nujw
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7ivd6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nujw/
|
1547092242
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
squee147
|
t2_70n8v
|
In my experience flat dbs like Mongo often start off seeming like a good solution, but as data structures grow and you need to better map to reality they can become a tangled nightmare. With the exception of small hobby projects, do yourself a favor and just build a relational DB.
[this article](http://www.sarahmei.com/blog/2013/11/11/why-you-should-never-use-mongodb/) lays it out in a clear real world example.
| null |
0
|
1545257096
|
False
|
0
|
ec533ka
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec533ka/
|
1547822233
|
31
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ibisum
|
t2_330zv
|
Oh, well .. that makes it okay then. I mean, obviously if *all the cool kids are doing it, then...*
| null |
0
|
1544105047
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nukb
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7muqn
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nukb/
|
1547092242
|
17
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
ivquatch
|
t2_3a6gu
|
Well, for one thing, F# has sum types, which adds a whole new dimension that's missing from Java, JS, and C#.
| null |
0
|
1545257100
|
False
|
0
|
ec533ro
|
t3_a7aua9
| null | null |
t1_ec2lha9
|
/r/programming/comments/a7aua9/why_you_should_learn_f/ec533ro/
|
1547822235
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
tnonee
|
t2_10p9s5
|
I'm not Australian, but I do own a business, so I have sent the following to as many aussie MPs as I can find:
>As a result of the passing of the Assistance and Access Bill, my company will:
>
>- No longer use Australian-based service providers such as Atlassian ($619.9m) or FastMail.
>- No longer provide consultancy services for Australian companies or individuals.
>- Advise clients to avoid storing or passing data through Australian entities.
>
>until this legislation is repealed in its entirety.
>
>In recent years, commercial data leaks have compromised the privacy and security of hundreds of millions of individuals. Instead of improving security, you are destroying it by creating enormous single points of failure. This is irresponsible and morally indefensible.
>
>Furthermore, I find the reasoning offered by your government "to keep people safe during Christmas" to be preposterous and not worthy of response.
Make them feel the heat for stupidity of this magnitude, any way you can.
| null |
0
|
1544105124
|
False
|
0
|
eb7nxq5
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7ayj0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7nxq5/
|
1547092281
|
190
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Pand9
|
t2_as7xb
|
These stories are from years ago. Mongo doesn't have such problems for a long time now. It is picked by companies because everyone who dares to do a few Google searches, realizes that it's reliable.
| null |
1
|
1545257109
|
False
|
0
|
ec53475
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec52neu
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53475/
|
1547822241
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
foobar349
|
t2_v5xrkvd
|
Does this apply to FastMail which is based in Australia but stores data in the US? I wonder if this decryption assistance also applies to data not stored in Australia? If the target is social media platforms like WhatsApp it seems it would since they are based in the US.
If so, this creates a national security problem for the US if foreign workers can be required to secretly hack US communication systems and data stored in the US. This isn’t just about hackers but foreign governments building secret backdoors. This sounds like a threat to other country’s national security.
| null |
0
|
1544105214
|
1544105922
|
0
|
eb7o1ec
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o1ec/
|
1547092327
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
jppope
|
t2_ia6qh
|
I'm curious what the net result will ultimately be. Postgres is fantastic, but I believe its been said that they are "the second best database for everything"... which makes me question if there isn't something thats a better fit and/or if they will end up regretting the decision.
Also based on the article (IMO) it seems like this is more of a political/business thing than a technical thing... which would also make me weary.
>"Due to editorial requirements, we needed to run the database cluster and OpsManager on our own infrastructure in AWS rather than using Mongo’s managed database offering. "
I'm wondering what the editorial requirements were?
| null |
0
|
1545257152
|
False
|
0
|
ec5360t
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t3_a7q1bi
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5360t/
|
1547822263
|
85
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
stevenacreman
|
t2_39i9xo7
|
Yep, I can confirm this is a money losing exercise.
Blog hosting costs, my own personal time and I keep buying paid wordpress plugins.
On the bright side I get asked much fewer questions at job interviews because most people have already read my blogs.
| null |
0
|
1544105270
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o3qy
|
t3_a3moqk
| null | null |
t1_eb7mk0u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3moqk/90_days_of_aws_eks_in_production/eb7o3qy/
|
1547092355
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
theoldboy
|
t2_5n3yf
|
Pretty sure the variance there is being measured between frame times, so you'd expect it to be high in an emulator.
> When benchmarking frame by frame, one frame we could be doing a ton of sound processing, and the next frame could just be moving around memory.
What's interesting is the difference between the different implementations. I tried [the benchmark](https://wasmboy.app/benchmark/) in Firefox 64.0 and the variance of frame times in WebAssembly is a magnitude better than the Closure compiled Javascript, which in turn is a magnitude better than plain Javascript.
| null |
0
|
1545257220
|
False
|
0
|
ec5391n
|
t3_a7o3p0
| null | null |
t1_ec4kc6g
|
/r/programming/comments/a7o3p0/webassembly_is_fast_a_realworld_benchmark_of/ec5391n/
|
1547822300
|
11
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
UNWS
|
t2_3e1wa
|
That binary is still signed by the company keys and would look just like the original. Once its out there you cant take it back.
| null |
0
|
1544105271
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o3s9
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7m08r
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o3s9/
|
1547092356
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545257221
|
1545268120
|
0
|
ec5392p
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec52h46
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec5392p/
|
1547822301
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
sambull
|
t2_jbpne
|
All Australian software or electronic services hosted there should be expected to have a backdoor.
| null |
0
|
1544105274
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o3w1
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7cuw4
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o3w1/
|
1547092357
|
8
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
sbrick89
|
t2_3thz0
|
you'd prefer MarkDown? /s
| null |
0
|
1545257242
|
False
|
0
|
ec53a1j
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec4vsks
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec53a1j/
|
1547822313
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
EWJacobs
|
t2_bash7
|
This isn't really a problem so long as Google's ideas are good ideas (i.e. web components) and not bad ideas (i.e. drm).
| null |
0
|
1544105284
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o4cc
|
t3_a3htqg
| null | null |
t1_eb7foh7
|
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb7o4cc/
|
1547092363
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Kinglink
|
t2_4fxzq
|
I want a number of documents.... Use MongoDB.
I want a number of documents as well as the most recent ones to be displayed first. .... Ok that's still possible with MongoDB..
I want a number of documents plus I want to be able to show each document in time (A time line)... uh oh...
I want a number of documents plus I want the ability to categorize them, and I Want to then have the ability to search on the author, or location.... and......
Yeah, you seem to fall into a common trap (I did too with work I did) that it sounds like it's not relational... but it really is. There's a lot of little relation parts to news articles, can be cheated in MongoDB, but really should just be a relational database in the first place.
Edit: To those responding "You can do that" yes... you can do anything, but NoSQL isn't performant for that. If you need to pull a page internally once a day, you're probably ok with NoSQL. If you need to pull the data on request, it's always going to be faster to use a relational database.
| null |
0
|
1545257300
|
1545262275
|
0
|
ec53cot
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53cot/
|
1547822346
|
57
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
beanbbeanie
|
t2_23yq8v08
|
I’m pretty sure the law is one big request for a back door, depending on how you look at it. And a “Fuck you” to all tech companies in Australia.
| null |
0
|
1544105300
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o4yv
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7j7rw
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o4yv/
|
1547092370
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Holston18
|
t2_ex7bjge
|
There's also the part where creative work is difficult and it's doesn't work like "now I'm going to sit here and immediatelly think of wonderful story which I will just put down on paper". Sometimes you need a break, otherwise you risk creating forced crap.
| null |
0
|
1545257306
|
False
|
0
|
ec53cy0
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec4pe0s
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec53cy0/
|
1547822349
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Shikigami_Ryu
|
t2_2jsri1eq
|
The Five Eyes intelligence are all corrupt as fuck.
| null |
0
|
1544105319
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o5q6
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o5q6/
|
1547092380
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
wredue
|
t2_1rbubxg4
|
Calling mongo a document store was the best piece of branding ever done in databases.
You’re going to have to do some actual research here on your own. A document store is not what people think it is and just because you can envision your website as a bunch of documents doesn’t mean you have a use case for mongo.
| null |
0
|
1545257321
|
False
|
0
|
ec53dmz
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec529o3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53dmz/
|
1547822357
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
DiscoUnderpants
|
t2_3jit4
|
Im an Aussie in the UK and the same thing is happening here. Here is what they want. They want encryption that is as secure and trust-able as it is now... but they want the themselves(ie the government) to be able to arbitrarily eavesdrop. When people point out these are contrary and physically and mathematically opposite positions they snort and say "Well the clever computer people can build the iPhones so surely this is simple" and don't believe them. The experts in this case are clearly just left wing anti authority types.
| null |
0
|
1544105359
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o7en
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7jyz2
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o7en/
|
1547092401
|
201
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
NotActuallyAFurry
|
t2_2avdsiun
|
IANAL.
>is probably a problem.
>is probably a problem.
>is probably a problem.
Brazil law is usually defined around what you're allowed to do. Can you point to the law that states that a web site can favour a browser that stated that is perfectly legal to just 'make it slower' just because?
| null |
0
|
1545257336
|
False
|
0
|
ec53ebq
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec511gc
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec53ebq/
|
1547822366
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
rabid_briefcase
|
t2_fj9rl
|
Whatever. I've been doing distributed programming since '93. Back when I learned it pre-Web, my teachers kept repeating that all of those problems were solved, harping on the literature and the importance of finding it so we weren't re-inventing the wheel. So people of my era learned them, and studied the literature. When we have fresh grads at work they don't know any history, they assume they can find what they need online if they need it, and fly by the seat of their pants.
Not Invented Here syndrome is alive and well, as is general ignorance of computing and computer theory.
| null |
0
|
1544105376
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o860
|
t3_a3cifu
| null | null |
t1_eb65rts
|
/r/programming/comments/a3cifu/everything_about_distributed_systems_is_terrible/eb7o860/
|
1547092410
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
jakdak
|
t2_4bmq9
|
Encryption at Rest has been available on DynamoDB since early 2018.
Surprised they didn't get advanced notice of that from their account rep and could plan/replan accordingly. They must have just missed that being available.
It had to have been massively easier/cheaper to move from Mongo to Dynamo than Mono to an RDB
| null |
0
|
1545257337
|
False
|
0
|
ec53eey
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t3_a7q1bi
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53eey/
|
1547822367
|
23
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
beanbbeanie
|
t2_23yq8v08
|
They might move their servers to, say, Japan or the US, as I’m sure neither have that shitty law. You can’t legislate that which isn’t based in your nation. (Europe, I’m looking at you)
| null |
0
|
1544105394
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o8yr
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb77jgv
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7o8yr/
|
1547092420
|
13
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Pand9
|
t2_as7xb
|
Is today's mongo db a fad? A few years ago, using it seriously would be irresponsible, but this changed.
| null |
1
|
1545257358
|
False
|
0
|
ec53fbv
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec522a4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53fbv/
|
1547822407
|
-4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
essdotc
|
t2_dyziy
|
Genuinely sorry to hear that. Never experienced that myself, nor did we ever have complaints from our users but I can see how people with sensitive eyes could suffer with the poor font smoothing. I know that it gradually got better over time but I haven't worked in WPF for a number of years now to know if they finally sorted that out.
| null |
0
|
1544105408
|
False
|
0
|
eb7o9kr
|
t3_a32foa
| null | null |
t1_eb7me37
|
/r/programming/comments/a32foa/announcing_open_source_of_wpf_windows_forms_and/eb7o9kr/
|
1547092427
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Kinglink
|
t2_4fxzq
|
It's not only that the schema is fixed, it's that the schema needs to be operated on. I need to sort by date, find by author, or more, those are relational moves.
If I needed a list of every movie ever made, even if I had a field for Director, and year, NoSQL works as good as relational databases.... but the minute you need to operate on those fields... well you're just blown the advantage of NoSQL. At least that's how I have seen it work.
| null |
0
|
1545257401
|
False
|
0
|
ec53h8e
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec52s17
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53h8e/
|
1547822430
|
67
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Shikigami_Ryu
|
t2_2jsri1eq
|
Can you deploy EKS to existing subnets without the need to add Kubernetes tags to them for discovery? Deploying Kubernetes to AWS seems like a pain considering your ELBs needed tags on the public subnets which are sometimes managed by other teams in a company and can’t just be updated willy nilly.
| null |
0
|
1544105543
|
False
|
0
|
eb7ofee
|
t3_a3moqk
| null | null |
t3_a3moqk
|
/r/programming/comments/a3moqk/90_days_of_aws_eks_in_production/eb7ofee/
|
1547092499
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
stronghup
|
t2_3mx3u
|
Thanks for the clarification. I was confused by the fact that "AMD" is also a company producing 64bit micro-processors https://www.amd.com/
| null |
0
|
1545257417
|
False
|
0
|
ec53hyh
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec51mdp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec53hyh/
|
1547822439
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
maratango
|
t2_19gxgval
|
https://www.idris-lang.org/
| null |
0
|
1544105655
|
False
|
0
|
eb7ok1g
|
t3_a3cble
| null | null |
t1_eb76vui
|
/r/programming/comments/a3cble/idris_2_typedriven_development_of_idris/eb7ok1g/
|
1547092557
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TheAnimus
|
t2_87mxh
|
Absolutely, I was having a pint with someone who worked on their composer system a few years ago. I just remembered thinking how he was drinking from the mongo coolaid. I just couldn't understand why it would matter what DB you have, surely something like Redis solves all the DB potential performance issues, so surely it's all about data integrity.
They were deep in the fad.
| null |
0
|
1545257483
|
False
|
0
|
ec53kz3
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec522a4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53kz3/
|
1547822476
|
104
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1544105667
|
False
|
0
|
eb7okkq
|
t3_a3iuj6
| null | null |
t3_a3iuj6
|
/r/programming/comments/a3iuj6/database_corruption_regression_in_sqlite_3260/eb7okkq/
|
1547092563
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
mctwistr
|
t2_f6qxa
|
Just curious, where can I get non-fake news?
| null |
0
|
1545257542
|
False
|
0
|
ec53nn1
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec4z9zk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec53nn1/
|
1547822510
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Coleman2430
|
t2_19u894jg
|
I’m not a programmer, here from r/all, how does this affect programmers?
| null |
0
|
1544105700
|
False
|
0
|
eb7oly0
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7oly0/
|
1547092580
|
-1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Pand9
|
t2_as7xb
|
It was good for this type of data. Nowadays all popular databases support all kinds of data. There are more important criteria to consider when picking a database.
| null |
0
|
1545257549
|
False
|
0
|
ec53ny7
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec5392p
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53ny7/
|
1547822513
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TheRufmeisterGeneral
|
t2_9ke1g
|
That makes no sense.
Us people outside the US have access to the original source code of open source projects.
We *have* working encryption.
| null |
0
|
1544105711
|
False
|
0
|
eb7omco
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7h3it
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7omco/
|
1547092585
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
dregan
|
t2_2t1oh
|
I've never heard of JSONB. Can you query data inside a JSONB column with an SQL statement? Is it efficient?
| null |
0
|
1545257577
|
False
|
0
|
ec53p8m
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec52h46
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53p8m/
|
1547822529
|
7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
JessieArr
|
t2_8bklx
|
Xamarin builds a native (or Mono on non-Windows platforms) app, then uses a library to parse your XAML UI code and turn it into native elements at runtime and applies some styles they provide that make it "look right" on all platforms unless you provide your own. So in my case the WPF app was a .NET Framework WPF app like most Windows apps, I was just leveraging Xamarin forms for the UI code so I could share the UI code with other platforms/mobile.
So it would end up being the size of a Mono executable on whatever platform it's deployed to. There's definitely some overhead there, but not too much from what I've seen. Electron performs poorly in this comparison because it is built on top of Chromium - they ship a small web browser inside of each app, so that they can display your HTML/CSS/JS code. Then they expose a JS API for doing "native" platform things like notifications, app icons, etc. As far as I'm aware, the zipped size of the Chromium binaries is about 30MB, so that's the "bare minimum" size of an Electron app, even without the Electron libraries and your own code.
| null |
0
|
1544105735
|
1544105926
|
0
|
eb7onf5
|
t3_a32foa
| null | null |
t1_eb6qfqm
|
/r/programming/comments/a32foa/announcing_open_source_of_wpf_windows_forms_and/eb7onf5/
|
1547092598
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
virtually_bindok
|
t2_1n6syo4l
|
ITT people assuming MongoDB is the problem while the article doesn't say that at all. The move was due to other issues.
| null |
0
|
1545257614
|
False
|
0
|
ec53qxg
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t3_a7q1bi
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53qxg/
|
1547822549
|
117
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Jalfor
|
t2_7bf8e
|
I don't believe that the law allows for "backdoors" to be required. From the bill:
> A technical assistance notice or technical capability notice must not have the effect of requiring a designated communications provider to implement or build a systemic weakness, or a systemic vulnerability, into a form of electronic protection.
where
> The reference in paragraph (1)(a) to implement or build a systemic weakness, or a systemic vulnerability, into a form of electronic protection includes a reference to one or more actions that would render systemic methods of authentication or encryption less effective.
(1a is the first paragraph).
I'd say a "backdoor" would certainly "render systemic methods of authentication or encryption less effective."
| null |
0
|
1544105851
|
False
|
0
|
eb7os8b
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7iumo
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7os8b/
|
1547092657
|
5
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Pand9
|
t2_as7xb
|
This article doesn't mention data integrity issues. Mongo has transactions now. I feel like you are riding on a "mongo bad" fad from 5 years ago. It was bad, it was terrible. But after all that money, bug fixes and people using it, it's now good.
| null |
0
|
1545257628
|
False
|
0
|
ec53rlv
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53kz3
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53rlv/
|
1547822558
|
34
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bartturner
|
t2_dyc5p
|
Is really surprising that MS would bail this easily. Heck they had over 90% market share before Chrome.
| null |
0
|
1544105934
|
False
|
0
|
eb7ovp0
|
t3_a3htqg
| null | null |
t3_a3htqg
|
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb7ovp0/
|
1547092700
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
IdiocracyCometh
|
t2_3s06i
|
Thanks for the tip, but I’ll stick with Firefox for video. They own YouTube. I’m not about to install extensions and go through any trouble to do something so basic as playing video. It’s a sign of Google’s decline IMO. Seems to rhyme with other tech leader declines I’ve lived through.
| null |
0
|
1545257629
|
False
|
0
|
ec53rn7
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec4x3js
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec53rn7/
|
1547822558
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TheGoodOldCoder
|
t2_fsmu9h3
|
At the daily stand up meeting:
Jim: ...
Bob: Jim, what is your status?
Jim: Couldn’t tell you.
Bob: Yesterday, you said you were working on issue 22. How is that going?
Jim: Don’t know. Something else came up.
Bob: What task are you working on? Should we add a new issue to the board?
Jim: No.
Bob: Is it on the roadmap? Is it a bugfix? Is it operations?
Jim: Big no to all of that.
Bob: Why would our company pay you to do this work?
Jim: That’s a great question, Bob. If I decided to work on my own personal projects during work time, that would basically amount to fraud on my part, wouldn’t it? With this new law, you can’t really tell whether I’m working on a “private” project or a “public” project.
| null |
0
|
1544105977
|
False
|
0
|
eb7oxjo
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7ayj0
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7oxjo/
|
1547092725
|
123
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
caskey
|
t2_730te
|
Are you using an ad blocker that prevents Google from setting the cookie to stop asking?
| null |
0
|
1545257637
|
False
|
0
|
ec53rzp
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4dogp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec53rzp/
|
1547822563
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
bartturner
|
t2_dyc5p
|
What would you consider "Remove the bad google stuff. "??
| null |
0
|
1544105984
|
False
|
0
|
eb7oxuq
|
t3_a3htqg
| null | null |
t1_eb6spe8
|
/r/programming/comments/a3htqg/while_we_blink_we_loose_the_web/eb7oxuq/
|
1547092728
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
XiiMoss
|
t2_9s381
|
Nope this is via my iPhone
| null |
0
|
1545257669
|
False
|
0
|
ec53th8
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec53rzp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec53th8/
|
1547822581
|
0
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
phinicota
|
t2_p9y4r
|
you've got 75% of that with golang, plus ~10 years of development and adoption AND they're working on implementing generics soon.
I know, I know, calm down boys, I know it's got a GC. But can you seriously fucking justify all memory leak risks and mind and code space needed for memory management *just* so you can optimize against a few **microseconds** of stop-the-world GC? golang designers are optimizing the hell out of that GC!
| null |
0
|
1544106104
|
False
|
0
|
eb7p2se
|
t3_a2b4n9
| null | null |
t1_eazlart
|
/r/programming/comments/a2b4n9/abner_coimbre_nasa_engineer_on_jai_language/eb7p2se/
|
1547092817
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
drysart
|
t2_3kikg
|
It's not a full fledged VM, it's basically a Docker container plus some extra new stuff to enable a user interface.
| null |
0
|
1545257686
|
False
|
0
|
ec53u7t
|
t3_a7hbku
| null | null |
t1_ec3d7xp
|
/r/programming/comments/a7hbku/windows_sandbox/ec53u7t/
|
1547822590
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
jcelerier
|
t2_nju89
|
it's a paradigm shift for containers
| null |
0
|
1544106178
|
False
|
0
|
eb7p5wh
|
t3_a3lvtr
| null | null |
t1_eb7l001
|
/r/programming/comments/a3lvtr/c20_standard_ranges_eric_niebler/eb7p5wh/
|
1547092859
|
16
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
TheAnimus
|
t2_87mxh
|
Sure, but remember this was I think 2012? That's why I found it an odd choice.
I can't think why someone would chose mongo mind.
| null |
0
|
1545257696
|
False
|
0
|
ec53uo4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53rlv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53uo4/
|
1547822596
|
10
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
cowinabadplace
|
t2_3xj24
|
This guy makes a new Reddit account for each comment, each of them similar to the previous one. I think he's too smart for us to talk to.
| null |
0
|
1544106185
|
False
|
0
|
eb7p68w
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7lv63
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7p68w/
|
1547092864
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
LimEJET
|
t2_4zfyw
|
Last I heard they made a big thing about now scaling to hundreds of gigabytes.
There's also that thing a while ago where postgres outperformed mongo on document storage (nosql-mode).
| null |
0
|
1545257701
|
False
|
0
|
ec53uw4
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53fbv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53uw4/
|
1547822599
|
27
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Mythd85
|
t2_6llzs
|
That would be a hilarious code review :
"I reviewed your pull request this morning John"
"Oh cool, any major issues?"
"Well actually, yes, there was one"
"Did I not cover all use cases?"
"Oh no, actually, you pointed out one that was missed"
"Performance?"
"Never seen code this fast"
"Readability? It looks messy?"
"Look, if Michelangelo could have painted code in his time, it would not have looked half as beautiful as what I saw this morning"
"Then what?"
"You installed a fucking backdoor in the system without telling anyone John. That's the fucking problem right there"
| null |
0
|
1544106262
|
False
|
0
|
eb7p9gj
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t3_a3kk7u
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7p9gj/
|
1547092903
|
351
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
IdiocracyCometh
|
t2_3s06i
|
I am not running nightly, no. But I have seen evidence they are focused on the dev tools and that is encouraging. Would love to ditch Chrome.
| null |
0
|
1545257730
|
False
|
0
|
ec53w7w
|
t3_a7k0an
| null | null |
t1_ec4wnib
|
/r/programming/comments/a7k0an/did_google_cripple_edges_youtube_performance/ec53w7w/
|
1547822615
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MrDick47
|
t2_6dm0u
|
Especially that last part.
| null |
0
|
1544106292
|
False
|
0
|
eb7paoi
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7mt5z
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7paoi/
|
1547092918
|
3
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
-Luciddream-
|
t2_dk4el
|
> While frantically deleting old code we found that our integration tests have never been changed to use the new API. Everything turned red quickly.
lol, sounds familiar
| null |
0
|
1545257751
|
False
|
0
|
ec53x7g
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t3_a7q1bi
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec53x7g/
|
1547822627
|
199
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
58working
|
t2_12db7k
|
How do they even reach the correct developer(s) in the company? It's not like anyone on the team can just 'put in the backdoor' without telling anyone. Once they manage to do it, are these changes going to be ignored by the version control system so that noone else sees the pushed changes? If so, does the sabateour need to figure out a way to continually reintegrate the backdoor into each new version of the app every time without people noticing?
Did the lawmakers even consult anyone who has worked on a dev team in a tech company?
| null |
0
|
1544106367
|
False
|
0
|
eb7pdrl
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb74x6k
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7pdrl/
|
1547092956
|
9
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
venuswasaflytrap
|
t2_3g78x
|
I guess what I’m saying, is that it’s a little weird to expect more from google employees or amazon or Microsoft or whoever, when you don’t expect it from the people around you, like your family and friends, and most people don’t expect it from themselves.
| null |
0
|
1545257752
|
False
|
0
|
ec53x89
|
t3_a7jj68
| null | null |
t1_ec4v086
|
/r/programming/comments/a7jj68/former_microsoft_edge_intern_claims_google/ec53x89/
|
1547822627
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
MrDick47
|
t2_6dm0u
|
You mean JavaScript? Java and JavaScript are very much different languages.
| null |
0
|
1544106617
|
False
|
0
|
eb7poo6
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7mj2n
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7poo6/
|
1547093091
|
-7
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
nemec
|
t2_3r7wz
|
There's an invisible Y in the name TeX, it stands for 'Yak'
| null |
0
|
1545257791
|
False
|
0
|
ec53z1f
|
t3_a7m6jc
| null | null |
t1_ec48jg4
|
/r/programming/comments/a7m6jc/a_profile_on_donald_knuth/ec53z1f/
|
1547822649
|
4
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Fig1024
|
t2_60h71
|
Elected officials shouldn't be required to have law degrees to make laws. However, there should be some kind of government agency that examines legality of laws, those people who have actual law degrees, and they should be able to rule a bad law as invalid and tell elected officials to try again
| null |
0
|
1544106659
|
False
|
0
|
eb7pqgx
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb77tyd
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7pqgx/
|
1547093113
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
somejob
|
t2_ia93z99
|
Leaning to use it in two of my postgrad IT classes, what is/ was bad about it?
| null |
0
|
1545257848
|
False
|
0
|
ec541qd
|
t3_a7q1bi
| null | null |
t1_ec53fbv
|
/r/programming/comments/a7q1bi/bye_bye_mongo_hello_postgres/ec541qd/
|
1547822683
|
2
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
Patrick_McGroin
|
t2_qmomn
|
I think its dangerous to ascribe bills like this to laziness on the politicians part. It's a tad conspiratorial but I think theses politicians know exactly what they are doing here.
| null |
0
|
1544106691
|
False
|
0
|
eb7prv6
|
t3_a3kk7u
| null | null |
t1_eb7kipf
|
/r/programming/comments/a3kk7u/australian_programmers_could_be_fired_by_their/eb7prv6/
|
1547093131
|
38
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
False
|
[deleted]
|
None
|
[deleted]
| null |
0
|
1545257865
|
False
|
0
|
ec542ik
|
t3_a7nggt
| null | null |
t1_ec4rppk
|
/r/programming/comments/a7nggt/netflix_standardizes_on_spring_boot_as_java/ec542ik/
|
1547822692
|
1
|
t5_2fwo
|
r/programming
|
public
| null |
Subsets and Splits
Filtered Reddit Uplifting News
The query retrieves specific news articles by their link IDs, providing a basic overview of those particular entries without deeper analysis or insights.
Recent Programming Comments
Returns a limited set of programming records from 2020 to 2023, providing basic filtering with minimal analytical value.