Oh no my cilantro aversion
Guys it’s a bit, he’s doing a bit. Calm down.
Worked out ok for me
I was 21 when I joined up. Got my batchelors, saw the world, met some people, did some things. Now I’m settled where I want doing the career I want. I credit the navy with a lot of the growing up/maturing I did.
You could join the AirForce. Get a degree or two out of it and get to travel some. 4 years isn’t a terrible commitment. I’d avoid the navy, army, or Marines tho, unless you also want to aim for medical disability lol
From the State Department:
Which part of “Condemming Russia’s Illegal Attempts to Annex Ukrainian Territory” is ambiguous?
That’s pretty neat
Bye bye influenza B/Yamagata
What? Does the aid received from the US and EU not count?
$2.1B from the US alone since 2022 plus sanctions on Russia and Belarus.
Edit, since folks can’t Google:
Pretty clear recognition to me. In fact 143 nations voted to condemn Russia calling what they did “illegal”.
Big tech won’t chip in is my bet. My company maintains its own version of Linux that has some specific certifications. Updating that box requires an act of god. My bet is that the companies that can afford to will create their own “LTS” versions that just get older and older, and more broken and exploited as time goes on…
Sorry, long night at work =/
My Owen was a Philip. Boy those were good times 😢👍
… I mean… I went to a four year university and got a Batchelors. Now I work as a software engineer. How’s that different from any other career path involving a 4 year degree?
I don’t mean to be contrary, but is it fair to call programming niche when there are degree programs and tech programs (bootcamps) that are widely available? Plus, in some cases, you don’t need a degree or certificates, just a portfolio.
God I love learning about analog tech! Very creative design!
That took me way too long to get lol
Same. Bootstrap at work, tailwind at home.
I’m in that boat now 😭
Except I built the app from the ground up and I was super proud of it. I learned so much about PKI and S3 and made a better system for our suppliers, engineers, and customers.
The fatal flaw was that changing supplier workflows was a complete non starter. It didn’t matter that I reduced the complexity of supplier involvement and made it easier for them to work with us, the old supplier portal HAD to be their front end, which has no api to interact with (one of the drivers for this project).
Without the direct supplier pipeline, the tool is worse than useless. Now we need a manual process to receive, validate, and sign software before moving it to the new system. Then to deliver it requires another manual process in reverse.
I made everyone involved life worse.