Not voting is the same as voting for Trump.
It's actually hot sauce specifically that has a tendency towards intentionally weird names. Don't know how it started exactly, but at this point it's a pretty common marketing gimmick.
Huh, you know what, maybe I'll give something like that a try. In the past I've tried doing one worktree per branch, but it was a pretty big hassle since I'd have to copy over a bunch of files every time (stuff sitting in the directory but not version-controlled). Yeah it can be automated, but it didn't seem worth it. But a persistent set of work trees that I can use to parallelize when needed sounds pretty good.
GDPR is really designed to target software controlled by a single entity, but this isn't that. The instances are responsible for their content, full stop. There's no way of forcing an instance to delete content, and even if there were, since the admins are running it, there's nothing stopping them from removing such a feature.
There's also nothing stopping admins from deleting content from their servers (it's just a database, after all).
For sure. If 32-year-old vim can handle multi-GB files smoothly, you don't need a GPU.
With a quick search on Zillow for Lincoln, Nebraska (~300k pop college town), cheapest I can find is $90k for a 1 bed/1 bath 500 sqft condo. $100k for a 1 bed/1 bath 500 sqft house, though technically that's a foreclosure so you might not consider that to count. The cheapest normal house for sale that I can find is $110k for a 2 bed, 1 bath 1500 sqft house. It's an older home, but actually a pretty decent location (close-ish to downtown).
HIPPA is no joke and companies actually don't fuck around with it. It's not worth it. It's one of the few pieces of consumer protection out there that has real teeth. Under HIPPA, you are expressly forbidden from using personal health information for anything unrelated to that patient's care, and companies can and are fined heavily for violating it.
Yes. Everyone should have autonomy over their own bodies, especially when it's a matter of something as major as pregnancy. Pregnancy is a medical condition, and the only person that should (legally) have any input in medical decision making for pregnancy is the person that's pregnant.
Yeah, sounds like they may not have been very comfortable with the tools. Which is fine, but nothing has really changed.
VMware is shockingly massive. Hundreds of different products and many, many teams.
It's very well-known and common knowledge. It's certainly something that I will talk about without feeling the need to define terms or something. I would assume anyone unfamiliar with it either didn't pay attention in school or never went to school to begin with.
It's a toss up, for me. Both managed to capture all discussion on major open source projects.