it's a hazard. for bezos, of course.
me and most of the developing world have mixed feelings about the war in ukraine. at the very least it's white people's problems. at the limit we're pissed by the west trying to rally us behind a country that stopped black people from leaving when the invasion came and that is receiving many times the amount of help that many of us have received during catastrophes, against a country that, wicked as it can be, never really messed with our internal affairs.
that being said, this is war and russia cannot complain that it didn't knew what was coming. deal with it (spoiler: they will).
they remained on dell, but have willingly forgone the oportunity of progressing in their career within the company in order to remain at home. some are even looking for other jobs in organizations that don't whip them back into offices.
Workers stayed remote even when told they could no longer be promoted.
Workers stayed remote even when told they could no longer be promoted.
if they d!e upon reentry, will someone pick up them cursing boeing on amateur radio?
good riddance, black banana asylum. you won't be missed.
My biggest concern over .NET is exactly how closed Microsoft-land can be. For what I've seen so far, with the notable exception of perhaps Unity, pretty much everything else gravitates around MS and there's no way of leaving it.
Thanks. For the record, the Brazilian government, where I work also loved Java.
I'm in the course of pursuing a change in my career towards software engineering/architecture. So far I've been brought mostly to C#/.NET and Java, though Java attracts me more, even considering that it might be a "dying" language. Still, Scala and Clojure are there, so I thought that they might give a pump at least to JVMs. In your opinion, should I invest in pursuing certifications/jobs in this field, or sticking to C#/.NET is a better path?
tbh i have no problem with curly brackets either. even though my first language was freebasic (!), i have worked more with curly bracket languages and actually find them quite useful, if not powerful.
funny thing is that the project page of hvm actually recommends bend.
Bend is the human-readable language and should be used both by end users and by languages aiming to target the HVM. (https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM?tab=readme-ov-file#language)
how do you compile code with gnu parallel? i mean, i'm really ignorant on parallel and at first glance it seemed that there's no way of compiling separate chunks of code with it.
A massively parallel, high-level programming language - HigherOrderCO/Bend
New language promises to reduce compilation times by using all threads and gpu cores available on your machine. What's your opinions on it so far?