There are 52 weeks in a year not 48. 500 x 52 = 26000.
There are 52 weeks in a year not 48. 500 x 52 = 26000.
I recently bought a van and am planning on road tripping while working. I had assumed that I would get starlink so I could work pretty much anywhere.
That is dead and I guess I’ll have to make sure I’m within range of a cell tower on working days.
It was removed because of supply chain issues.
It was because covid interrupted supply chains. Same reason they removed lumbar support from passenger seats.
They never had lidarr. They used to have radar and uss but they decided “vision” was good enough. This conveniently occurred when they had supply chain issues during covid.
That’s what I do 99% of the time with my car. The scroll wheels and voice commands work well.
This is going to be unpopular but I quite like the buttonless UI in my car (6 year old swasticar). I recently bought a van and it’s so distracting.
Buttons are all over the place and I have two screens to monitor. Honestly, I spend more time looking at the controls in the van ghsn the car.
I’m getting rid of it soon and I’m not looking forward to that part.
“you” was rhetorical. You do understand that someone can wear a Nazi uniform? That is no different than driving a nazi car.
Musk still gets some money if you ever need parts. I had to replace the heater and went to non tesla shop. Unfortunately, he wasn’t able to get a used heater so I had to buy a new part.
I have BYD badges that should be here any day.
The same way you have a nazi uniform.
It won’t.
The sooner you isolate us economically, the sooner it will better for all of us.
I used to use an app called moneydance several years ago. It was pretty much the only thing that ran on Linux but it was decent.
Yes that would be covered under “chips” but not under autos.
For better or worse, all Teslas sold in USA are built in Fremont or Austin.
I’d bet that the government is probably the largest user of SQL. Unless there are really old systems that predate SQL. I’d imagine they have shitloads of COBOL for example.
He seems to be one of those people that think nosql should be used everywhere.
This sounds just like a former manager that thought nosql was the end all and that SQL had no place.
If course they developed their app that required frequent data migrations because they were in fact very dependent on all the records matching the latest schema.
C# is a great language but I’ll always choose Java because the ecosystem around it is so vast. Often times some client library you need has a c# port maintained by one guy and he hasn’t updated in years.