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373
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • To be fair, that's on you. If libraries had pizzas, I would start visiting them.

  • Removed

    GitHub is down

    Jump
  • Last time I tried Codeberg, it went down every other day. So if this prompts you to switch, my advice is: don't.

  • Removed

    GitHub is down

    Jump
  • With that logic you can connect anything to anything. We can start posting news about war in Ukraine here or something like that, because with enough desire one can find even more indirect connections.

  • IMDB I can accept, random news websites - no.

  • DDG is moving into the same direction. I had to use ublock to hide the news block that appears when I'm searching for a movie/show in order to avoid spoilers.

  • IIRC some people opted to come back to the toilet. It's gold.

  • To me that's more ethical than killing of billions of animals, and the latter is considered ethical. I wouldn't do that because that would feel weird, but not unethical.

  • Who gave a Resident Evil villager access to Lemmy 💀

  • I don't want to eat human meat, but I don't mind if you kill that asshole from accounting.

  • Do it

    Jump
  • I can confirm that's the case where I live.

  • If anything, this only proves their point: there is less of everything. Compare this amount of content a similar sub on reddit.

  • That sounds strange. I cannot comment on your particular case without seeing the test artifacts.

    Generally speaking, there is nothing wrong with tests that ensure bad input doesn't break the system, as this can easily lead to incorrect system states, damage to the environment, loss of data, money, reputation, and even lives - although most systems are not critical enough to threaten lives.

    You wouldn't need QAs if you only needed to validate that the product meets the requirements. In a typical company, many people are involved in that process. This includes the developer who wrote the code, the developer who reviewed it, and the people who conduct acceptance testing, among others. If your developers produce code that doesn't meet the requirements, you're in trouble.

    I'm not saying that QA shouldn't validate whether the system meets the requirements, but you don't want them to do just that.

  • A QA engineer walks into a bar and asks where the bathroom is. The bar bursts into flames. The product owner says that the bar can be shipped anyway.

  • You used the AUR incorrectly

    I ain't gonna lie, that sounds like a skill issue.

  • Great, it's reliable and enforces design patterns!

  • I'm not surprised. A cube can't be round. That's an obvious design flaw.

  • Why do you think these people are idiots? I believe Twitter promotes content posted by paid users. Last time I was on Twitter (about a year ago), they were planing to exclude regular users from the "smart" feed. Plus, people could write longer posts instead of threads. Unlike with reddit gold, I see real benefits for content creators.