Now the real question is what package manager are they using? apt or yum? Lol
See picture.
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XML is fine. Namespaces have a special place in hell though
Linux absolutely isn’t perfect, no technology is. But in my years of experience with both, Linux on the whole is far less finicky, and far easier to fix when it breaks.
I agree 110% but it’s also worth mentioning that windows isn’t as finicky as we complain about. If it was, companies wouldn’t by and large rely on it. People are delusional if they think Windows is only around because of some conspiracy or historical precedent. “It works” plain and simple. As you scale you’re going to run into issues regardless of the OS. It’s naive to think Linux is the be all that end all. As much as anyone I want to be Linux only. My home computers have been Linux for decades now. I’m a realist. There’s value and challenges with every OS. I hate the industry trend of Windows over Linux but I get it
whoisearth@lemmy.cato Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•My debugging experience today: Quantum Debugging8·9 months agoWhen I write APIs I like to set endpoints to return all status codes this way no matter what you’re doing you can always be confident you’re getting the expected status code.
Snake if writing in python
Camel if writing in PowerShell
I tend to stick with what the language wants me to use.
It really applies to anything. Whenever you read of policy related arguments always look at the people complaining. Rule of thumb is it gives you a good idea of who the policy hurts the most. If it’s large companies or rich people complaining by and large it’s probably a good policy.
We notice you watch a lot of interracial porn which means you’re good with a diverse and multicultural work environment. LMFAO
They’re all Ubuntu distros lol