Rust had a 2+ major memory CVEs in its standard library, and so had kernel Rust.
My point was that it's possible to write memory safe C, I have not implied that this meant 0 memory issues ever. Just pointed out that it has a lot to do with the programmer behind the code.
As many commenters have pointed out, a lot of that wealth will disappear into the grubby hands of private-equity-owned assisted living facilities and nursing homes.
Yeah I’m a type-a. People talk about all their unfinished personal projects and I’m like “heh?” Why not finish?? I guess some of us can see things through and others just want to dabble. That’s fine. There’s only so much time we’re alive: don’t let other people tell you what should be fun!
The job market is rough. My wife went back to school for audio/sound design, finished the program + got a bunch of certifications.
She's been trying to get anything, even an unpaid internship, doing sound design, going to local meetups, online conferences, and hasn't had much luck.
But I told her: it's just a matter of persistence and time. If you're agreeable to be around, passionate about something, and just show up everyday, eventually something is likely to happen.
I understand this story, and I have heard it many, many times - but I do not understand how something that is possible for thousands of hobbyists writing text editors on their weekends is not possible for professionals!
Same, it's only in /home on my system also. Also /home is pretty much the only directory where I see fsck needing to do a lot of recovery after a power failure. Makes sense I guess, because that's where processes such as web browsers are likely to have lots of files open in RW mode.
We once deleted the lost+found folder on an old Unix system* by accident. Things went very badly the next time the system rebooted, fsck did not handle it at all well.
We use Linear at work. I’m definitely in the minority, but I really struggle with the UX. I also wouldn’t call it fast. Sure the page technically loads reasonably quickly, but half the time I see numbers updating on the page with no visual indicator that data loading is still happening.
"is there a real difference in waiting 7 minutes rather than 3.5?" Yes - that is a real difference! Halving your waiting time when downloading large files is a meaningful difference.
I go to EGS once a week or so just to see which free game is on offer, and the experience is only barely tolerable.
If you're giving away free games and can barely manage to attract people to your storefront, you might be doing something wrong.
In their defense I suppose, most other competitors weren't much better. I don't think anyone misses Origin, and you'd have to pay me to spend any amount of time on Ubisoft's storefront. Only GOG comes close, and they earn a lot of good will in other ways.
See https://developers.openai.com/cookbook/articles/openai-harmo... and src/openai/types/shared/reasoning_effort.py