Easily achievable if you only take calls in working hours. Then all working hours will have more than average calls per hour for a day.
BehindTheBarrier
New car smell, it's awful. Sort of stale plastic if I were to describe it.
Amplified by long trips on bad roads as kid. Guaranteed to make you feel like vomiting on some sections. Now when I anticipate/pack for a trip I tend to smell that again even though I'm not even in a car.
It's not that universal, but we have named a few things "Engines", for example Balancing Engine. We also use services, but they are actually independent programs that performs jobs. Engine are used in other places, such as the ViewModels, or in the services.
We put them in the DomainModel project which most things reference though. That's were most basic functionality and shared resources end up if they are used across Client/Service/Backend projects. So Domain / DomainModel might be a thing to use as well, if you want a specific namespace for that kind of use.
It's worth adding I greatly prefer MS Auth style authentication, since I don't have to find the right entry to read the Auth code and then write it on the other computer. Instead MS pops a notification and you either type or select the right number, verify with fingerprint and done. Much more convenient.
It often tells you what you login into and where you are attempt to log in from, so it's a few extra layers of security for those that have that awareness to check those details.
A lot of external drives are just internal devices with another controller and casing around. I had a 4TB I used with my laptop, and tore apart the casing and just plugged it into my desktop when I built one. Unless you start hammering the external case around, the drive will be fine.
Played a lot of rainbow six siege, where you have to shoot those 360° security cameras when you are attacking. So, now I'm trained to spot those on instinct.
Pretty sure that site is satire, iirc with some right leaning bias but my memory is vague.
So it's political ads, but at least fake politics :P
Pretty much anything in katakana in Japan is loanwords.
Very interesting about flew markets though, Norway is the same as Sweden here.
The simplicity of Google Photos has me still rolling with that.
But for all my music, syncthing is the best. In my case it's synced to my phone though, and also backuped up from that to the cloud.
I disabled my adblock for Twitter to see a update about game server maintenance. It showed me random posts, nothing from this year. Literally unusable site when you can't even see the latest tweets. Had to have other people tell me maintenance was extended...
Faster is 90% of the reason for me. It's just so much more smoother, i can find things faster and do things faster. ButI also use a lot of the developing features, creating/converting properties, functions and such. Probably also in VS but i'm not that used to them. I'm also used to quickly jumping around in the code by going to definitions. Rider is nicer here, because VS is clunky and feel like there is two system competing to do that in VS with Resharper. Not to mention the stutters and slow program.
I like the git integration better in Rider. I think VS solved it, but selecting a remote branch wasn't actually getting you that branch before you pulled the changes manually. To the point where i pushed a brand new branch, someone else selected that in VS, and when they ran the build it didn't work at all because it didn't have all the changes?? It also did not auto-fetch, so it showed you were up to date with the remote despite not being... Apart from that, it makes swapping branches a lot easier. VS gets angry with uncommited changes. And while i wasn't a huge fan of the new diff view, diffs without newline changes and such is a killer feature, especially for someone that got a new editorconfig but not the entire codebase refactored... (because, too busy to do such a large change)
The biggest downside to Rider is hot-reloading of XAML. Rider does not support that for .NET at least. It's a bit of a bummer since VS allows some very rapid iteration solving layouting issues.
Just the last week, I have had memory issues where Rider eats up to 10 GB of ram and then starts stuttering after being open for more than a day. I just installed the latest update that hoepfully fixed that. Rider also sometimes just decides not to run one or more programs in a multi-launch config, particularly the first time after starting. That's a bit annyoing.
I do not really like the database integration, but we also have a stupid oracle database and the way to handle that is a whole other story.
I use phone every day at office so I don't need to get the wallet out of my jacket when going to the canteen to buy lunch. It's literally the reason I started using my phone to pay. Too many times I forgot my card...