I'm sure Satlink has been extensively trialled for that use too.
squaresinger
It must really suck to work as a Java developer in Greece.
Transitioning from revolution to government is hard. It takes a very different kind of person to lead a successful revolution than to lead a democratic country.
Gitflow is the usual branching strategy. It's not dialed up to 11, it only specifies precisely what to merge to where and from where.
The real mavericky thing is when someone uses cherrypicking in combination with squash merges thus breaking branch compatibility.
I have been the git specialist in the last few teams, and thus I'm the one who has to clean that up every time. Not because it's hard, but because nobody can be bothered to actually learn git.
Edit: The other thing is to use rebases instead of merges. Yes, they make for a much nicer git history, but they also tend to break everything in the process when the rebase is sufficiently large.
The old "I have this great idea for an app! If you build it for me, you can have 10% of the profits!".
And then you ask for the idea, and at first they don't want to give it away with your agreement, and in the end it turns out to be either whatsapp of amazon.
And that likely holds true even if the bike in question is the crappiest old piece of trash.
It's not a form of censorship, it's a form of democracy.
If you are not ok with a downvote reducing visibility, then by extension you should hate upvotes just as much, since they reduce the visibility of everything else.
Yeah, apart from medical costs, the worst a cyclist can do is maybe smash a window of a parked car. The maximum amount of property damage is maybe a few 1000. Nothing that an average person can't pay off within a reasonable time frame.
Caucausing isn't really comparable to coalitions in my opinion, because all the formalisms are missing.
Bernie Sanders has no actual power within the party, no matter how many people voted Democrats because of him.
Compare the situation to an actual multi-party system with coalitions. Sanders would have his own party and there would be 1-3 other parties that are currently part of the Democratic party. Each of these parties would collect separate vote shares which would lead to some of these parties being larger and others smaller. Voters would have to choice to express which exact political direction they prefer instead of just having a binary choice.
After the election, coalitions would be formed. These coalitions wouldn't have to be along the current party lines, but e.g. moderate republicans and moderate democrats could form a coalition with eachother. This way, coalition-based multi-party systems tend towards moderate compromises, while two-party systems tend towards extremism.
In a multi-party system centrists represent reason and compromise, whereas in a two-party system they represent boring blandness.
In a coalition, each of the coalition partners hold power, because everyone of them can end the coalition. This means, more compromise is necessary and someone like Sanders cannot just be ignored for decades.
Dass die auch immer erst einen heftigen Personen- oder Sachschaden verursachen müssen um drauf zu kommen das jemand der Gas und Bremse nicht auseinander halten kann nicht hinters Steuer sollte.
Das Gas und Bremse verwechseln leuchtet mir auch wirklich nicht ein. Man drückt die Pedale doch normalerweise relativ sanft. Selbst wenn man so hin im Hirn ist, dass man die beiden Pedale nicht auseinander halten kann, dann sollte man doch denken, dass wenn das Auto nicht macht was man will, dass man erstmal nicht das falsche Pedal durchdrückt.
"Das Auto wird schneller wenn ich auf das Pedal drück statt stehen zu bleiben. Da muss das Auto wohl falsch verstanden haben was ich will, ich drück also erstmal richtig durch, dann wird es schon verstehen dass ich grad die Bremse drücke."
Ab 60 sollte es alle 5 Jahre und ab 70 jedes Jahr eine ärztliche Überprüfung geben. In diesem Alter sind die meisten Leute eh mindestens jährlich beim Arzt, da kann man sowas auch gleich mit machen.
For stuff like that I usually put the email address of my former boss.