I’m absolutely biased as a data engineer who loves SQL, but there are some good reasons why SQL has been the de facto standard for interacting with databases since the 80s.
One of its draws is that it’s easy to understand. I can show a stakeholder that I’m selecting “sum(sale_amount) from transactions where date=yesterday” and they understand it. Many analysts are even able to write complicated queries when they don’t know anything else about programming.
Since it’s declarative, you rarely have to think about all the underlying fuckery that lets you query something like terabytes of data in redshift in minutes.
Debugging is often pretty nice too. I can take some query that didn’t do what it was supposed to and run it over and over in a console until the output is right.
You don’t want to pull cold air in but a small fan to circulate the air in the enclosure gives you more even temps from top to bottom and can improve print quality. I installed a nevermore filter a while back to filter the filament fumes and was surprised to see my prints improve too.
Glad you figured out something that worked for you. Don’t be such a dick next time and you’ll find everyone will be more helpful.
That error is saying you’re trying to move/rename the file to a name that’s already being used. Can’t do that on windows either.
That said, I’ve seen some weird issues with bulk file copies in Linux file explorers. Cli usually works better.
There are 2 different physical sensations for tasting salt. One for low salt that tastes good and one for high salt that tastes bad. This is believed to help regulate salt intake.
https://knowablemagazine.org/article/food-environment/2023/salt-taste-surprisingly-mysterious
Not suggesting your gf stops taking any medication to make you happy, but does she take any hormonal birth control? I know someone who was on a variety of them nonstop for years and was starting to think she was asexual. Turns out birth control can destroy sex drive.
Open source code isn’t immune to backdoors. It’s impossible to exhaustively test every interaction in massive code bases for unintended behavior.
The upside of open source is that a well intentioned person might find a backdoor and get it fixed. Up until then it might be someone’s backdoor.
Better?
Open source code isn’t immune to exploits. It’s impossible to exhaustively test every interaction in massive code bases for unintended behavior.
The upside of open source is that a well intentioned person might find a vulnerability and get it fixed. Up until then it might be someone’s 0 day.
@Imacat
@lemmy.dbzer0.com