





We have a similar saying in Denmark, something like “shoemakers kids always have holes in their shoes” but in this case it’s more about that the people in the profession don’t prioritize their own craft. I’ve seen this with electricians where whole house is done but electrical sockets aren’t installed but for IT I think it’s more about distrust towards developers (takes one to know one)


From their website it looks like they’re “reselling” so, that’s my best guess as to why their bill would be so high


Not sure this is what social media wants. They want to maximize shareholder value. The teen segment is crazy valuable since a lot of them are able to convince parents to buy them all kinds of shit. Without this segment, advertisers will turn to other platforms and thus remove lots of ad money from these platforms
Imagine this, but in a word doc:

Wow that hurt to read. Thanks for sharing!
So you’re saying this is how I can become a 10x engineer?


Perhaps this is what Al Gore was “super cereal” about

That’s the neat part: we often don’t know how/whether these things can be applied to programming, Econ, or other fields of study. But all of a sudden someone might find a use case for it.


Here’s my 50 CSV files for you to create a powerbi report on top of.
As well as
How do I export the data from my report to CSV?
Study of mental illnesses
man -> manual ❌
man -> man 👨
ls -> LiSt ❌
ls -> Let’s See what’s hiding inside of this folder ✅


Lets you run Linux stuff on your Windows machine.
I am ready, Mr squid. All of me
He used to have an is_nice bool but consultants convinced Santa it isn’t future proof enough to capture the nuances of kids behaviour in today’s world, such as “nice but always is really smug about it”. But the consultants kept making PowerPoints instead of updating the backend, so now Santa also has added a new value to behaviour: “consultant-like”
I hate capitalism too, but imo these advice seem reasonable in my career at least. Way too much time is spent on products that would never be used, since it was the wrong product to begin with.