The lesson learned (in my opinion) is that if you're going to design a language where errors need to be handled explicitly, you need to design the language from the ground up to support monadic error handling syntax. At this point, it seems too late to add it to Golang. What a shame - it could have been so much better of a language without this flaw.
namingthingsiseasy
This would undoubtedly be wildly unethical, but those people should have been recorded and played back to anyone who refused vaccinations, for any disease really.
and that the parents were universally obnoxious and resistant.
Wow, I would have never guessed....
(/s, obviously)
I've seen even worse! Sticky headers with sticky sidebars on both sides. Only about 10-15% of the viewport was left for content. And this is for documentation, so you can only read about 100-200 words at once.
Why even bother having a webpage at that point. Just make the whole thing a non-interactive .png file.
Sticky headers. Unbearably distracting.
Also, wasted space and a lack of information density.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: presidential systems suck. I'm not an expert on Polish politics, but it seems at the very least like the Poles were given a good choice of a candidate. Still, having too many people voting for a single candidate for a single office repeatedly leads to bad outcomes. France, Turkiye, USA - now we can add Poland to the list too.
Abolish presidencies! Embrace parliamentary systems!
100% agree. But I like posting articles like these because it brings me back to how I learned programming, and Linux specifically - namely by reading a bunch of articles from similar link aggregators and sharing sites.
My hope is that sharing articles like these is a form of planting the seeds for another cycle for people to learn the way that I did.
We can easily take images like this for granted today, but for its time, a photograph like this was an incredible achievement. Both photography itself as well as air travel have progressed a lot over the 160+ years since this photo was taken. It really puts a lot into perspective how much technology (and the world itself) has changed in so much time.
I just disabled this today and life is so much better. Thanks! Everything works so much better now.
I have no words for how stupid of an idea this was. Pitching your browser as a privacy-friendly alternative (which few people ever cared about), and then doing the exact opposite thing and integrating a service like this which nobody asked for, and also making it unremovable was just a hilariously stupid move.
Good riddance, but the damage done by this chapter of stupidity is basically irredeemable.
Can you put some milk on the algorithm please?
It's really annoying. It no different from people who go into Linux forums and talk about how much they love Windows.