He basically begged for that position after years of standing in the transporter room, waiting for the odd episode where something actually does go wrong with it.
He wanted a place where he could be creative and solve problems, rather than be overshadowed by the chief engineer getting the credit every time.
As a software engineer for a large corporation, I feel this deeply
I was one of those Holy Grail kids, I loved the movie and memorized the lines. Wanting more, I looked up other Monty Python works
I was in 7th grade or something, raised in a very religious home. I was not expecting what Life of Brian was, and I know I wasn't old enough to understand all of the jokes they made
This is what I've been saying. I think it should go even further and give admins a default block list of users.
A lot of folks talk about how Lemmy became useable after they spent hours (or sometimes a month) blocking the right communities and users, but most social media users don't want to work that hard, they just want to start doomscrolling.
I have had closee friends get very mad at me for making this point.
Netanyahu is bloodthirsty. Biden is spineless. This doesn't absolve him of his complicity, but they are distinct issues, and they should be addressed accordingly.
Silly Kim, the Borg can select what to assimilate and what not.
Except for the times they couldn't, such as In the cases of Hugh, Icheb, and Endgame's Janeway vs Borg Queen.
Okay maybe the last one isn't fair since Janeway did have the future advantage. But the other cases showed that entire cubes were lost to this sort of attack.
There are very few situations where a dead man's switch would have helped these whistleblowers.
Once they have gone public and are at risk of being "suicided" they should have already released everything they knew. Sitting on it after already going public in any way only helps if the goal is to blackmail or extort the company, rather than to expose the company or protect others.
A lot of people have latched onto the idea of a dead man's switch (and I get it, technical solutions are fun to create), but the only part of the scenario it would help is before the whistleblower goes public, while they are still gathering information and haven't yet been discovered by the company. Even then, it wouldn't protect them from being killed, it would only ensure that the partial work is released in case they were discovered and prevented from finishing it.
He basically begged for that position after years of standing in the transporter room, waiting for the odd episode where something actually does go wrong with it.
He wanted a place where he could be creative and solve problems, rather than be overshadowed by the chief engineer getting the credit every time.
As a software engineer for a large corporation, I feel this deeply