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@kitty @MisterRogersSnapped @alyx @igeljaeger Yeah, there's the matter of making sure you can work there, but it's often treated like "Do you already agree?" They'll ask what my philosophy on unit testing is. It's a hivemind question. (They probably don't ask that any more, they probably ask about repo branching scheme now.) I've hacked at places with some tests, no tests, excessive testing, full-stack tests, unit tests, fuzzers running 24 hours a day. Anyone can handle whatever, there's no learning curve. They're asking to see if you already agree. (I used to like API-level tests, but I think this is probably because I think about APIs a lot.) Got passed on once due to the answer I gave (I shit you not) to the question of where I read my tech news.

(That's why I went freelance for so long. Could not stand the alternation between hivemind questions and people giving me toy problems and asking me to prove that I have basic competence at work I have spent my life doing.)
this is the funniest thing I've read about the bolshevik revolution, the entire economic mismanagement that took hold from 1917 until 1923(with some help of WW1) is mindbogglingly stupid

>During the civil war the regime had collected no taxes, funding itself by confiscating grain and other goods and printing paper money. Confusion enveloped the country’s monetary base. The populace still used nikolaevki (rubles under Nicholas II), dumskie (rubles associated with the Duma period), and kerenki (rubles under Kerensky and the Provisional Government), which the Soviet regime itself printed for a time without the crown on the double-headed eagle, as well as foreign currency, which circulated illegally and at ever steeper exchange rates.The Whites in territories they controlled had accepted Soviet-printed kerenki, but not Soviet rubles (sovznaki) on which the Whites stamped β€œmoney for idiots.”The resulting runaway inflation made vodka a major means of exchange and store of value, as barter took over the economy. Things were not as bad as Weimar Germany’s hyperinflation, where the Mark went from 60 to $1 in 1921 to 4.2 trillion to $1 two years later, but a top tsarist-era economist estimated that between 1914 and 1923 the ruble depreciated by 50 million times.
>Some Bolshevik fanatics asserted that the hyperinflation constituted a form of class war, and one called the printing presses the β€œmachine-gun of the finance commissariat.” Ideologues also asserted that the β€œend of money” marked an advance in the stages of civilization, toward Communism.
@loop @gladicouldnthelp I am just waiting for tha apple cult to lose their heads a little longer then I will have an original Macintosh Portable to sell them, mint condition with an external floppy drive, zipper case, manuals... Gonna wait til they hit about 5 granf to sell it.
@terryenglish yeah i really like her and feel bad for her, she's a harmless autist like a mouse in a maze
Ultrabook is the ultimate form factor. Change my mind.
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