Comment on: Programmers are having a huge discussion about the unethical and illegal things theyve been asked to do
0 22 Nov 2016 01:13 u/coldacid in v/programmingComment on: Programmers are having a huge discussion about the unethical and illegal things theyve been asked to do
Just like soldiers, we have the right to refuse unethical orders. It's just that we'll likely lose our jobs for it no matter how senior we are. But if that happens, there's always the ability to leak out whatever we were told to do.
Comment on: The custom software development That Wins Customers
This is not how to advertise on Voat. You should go here instead.
Stack Overflow Documentation -- crowdsourced docs and examples -- now in public beta
1 0 comments 21 Jul 2016 14:55 u/coldacid (..) in v/programmingComment on: "Can we please get rid of the brain-damaged stupid networking comment syntax style, PLEASE?" Linus Torvalds rants against ugly commenting styles
Using Word (or any WYSIWYG word processor) as an IDE should be a firing offense. As in from a cannon. Into the sun.
Comment on: C# 6.0 Null-Conditional Operator and robustness of code
It can be abused so it is a bad construct.
I expect that kind of shoddy thinking from politicians, not other developers.
Comment on: Apollo 11 Guidance Computer source code
And we complain about having less than 8GB of RAM these days.
Comment on: Why can't programmers... Program?
I bet even the non-developers at Google can write FizzBuzz in their sleep.
Comment on: Why can't programmers... Program?
Also that fizbuzz is easy. People who can't do that are people who were patted on the back to many often for learning a framework.
This is pretty much the point of FizzBuzz. It's not to find the great programmers, but to weed out all the idiots who choke up on even the most trivial problems. If it weren't so easy, it'd be useless.
Comment on: What's is the best text editor to use from command line?
nano is pretty good but if you want real power when editing in the console, Take up xemacs. Just a warning, though, you may need to grow additional fingers to use it effectively.
Comment on: Programming tip: Stay away from throwing exceptions.
There were never any regressions caused by exception handling in all the time I worked for that company, and bug fixes were rarely an issue and never anything that anyone in our team was afraid of. And neither there nor at my current employer do we push back CRs; we're professionals, not wusses.
Comment on: Programming tip: Stay away from throwing exceptions.
You're an idiot if you truly think this, not to mention shifting the goalposts with "excessive exception [use]". I've worked on a number of large projects, both as a regular developer and as an architect and it's not that hard to make judicious, proper use of exceptions. You strike me as a noob developer who has been burnt once by badly misusing exceptions and now think they're not but the devil's tools.
Git gud or stop coding, you scrub.
Comment on: Microsoft SQL Server: coming to a Linux distro near you (in 2017)
Yeah, my comment is pretty clearly hyperbole. I doubt Microsoft is emotionally ready to give up NT just yet, but first and foremost they're a software & services company. If people are going away from Windows, Microsoft's going to follow with its products -- especially the big money-making productivity and server ones.
Comment on: Microsoft SQL Server: coming to a Linux distro near you (in 2017)
The more likely and less paranoid view is that if they can get SQL Server running on Linux, then that's one more part of Azure they can move to lower-cost, lower-powered hardware. It's a smart move and one I'd take if I was in Nadella's seat too.
Comment on: Microsoft SQL Server: coming to a Linux distro near you (in 2017)
Prediction: Windows 11 will be Win32 and UWP on top of Linux and Wayland.
Microsoft SQL Server: coming to a Linux distro near you (in 2017)
14 15 comments 07 Mar 2016 22:22 u/coldacid (..) in v/programmingMandrills Betrayal: new account requirements and AUP are a stab in the back to everyone using Mandrill for email as a service
1 0 comments 01 Mar 2016 10:21 u/coldacid (..) in v/programmingComment on: Most software already has a golden key backdoorits called auto update
The second becomes almost impossible if the original application vendor enforces digital signature verification on update bundles before installing them.
Unless/until some state actor forces the vendor to sign the malware, like the FBI is demanding, or someone gets their hands on the private signing key. And you're wrong that it "doesn't really apply" on open source systems. Just because the user initiates updates instead of the operating system doesn't mean that the signers can't be coerced into signing malware masquerading as an update, or that someone with enough resources can't steal the keys and creds needed to push such malware into a package repository.
Comment on: Another bigot joining Github. Inclusiveness doesn't include white men.
Because it's easier having a central repository for the team to access as there's still no stable Gittorrent to decentralize the repositories themselves.
Comment on: Hate GitHub being taken over by gender politics? Don't worry, you're not alone.
Sign up with BitBucket and get unlimited private repos for free.
Comment on: #HackerLivesMatter - Systemic abuse in the software industry is ruining lives and taking them.
So good right up to the Bernie boost at the end. I feel like I was conned by reading this because of that sudden switch at the end. People died, and the author wants to turn it into political promotion? Even if that wasn't his intent, that's how it came off to me, and I'd rather see Sanders as president than any of the other candidates.
Comment on: These are the trendiest programming languages of 2016
Yeah like I'm going to accept a list of "trendy" languages from a Java-focused site rather than a site that is language and platform agnostic.
Comment on: An anonymous response to dangerous FOSS Codes of Conduct
I like Roberto Rosario's Code of Merit; it makes it explicit that issues should be about the code and not who people are outside of the community.
Comment on: Firefox Nightly starts marking login-forms in HTTP as insecure
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It's getting easier. I forget its name but there's that service that will issue free TLS certificates for sites so long as you can validate your ownership of the domain, that just got its CA certificate included in (I believe) Chrome. There's also CAcert, which is free, but unfortunately doesn't have much carriage at this time with their CA certificate.
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If you're debugging something, you should have a good understanding of what's going on (or at least what should be going on). By that standard, if you're debugging HTTPS connections you should have enough of an understanding to know about self-signed certificates and cert installation.
Comment on: xkcd comic: Git
Yeah, if you like having a never-ending tree of constantly spawning git processes. Because fuck libgit2, amirite?
Comment on: JetBrains' CEO's "final update" on the licensing model change, and it's still a screw job for developers
You're a funny man, @onegin. I'll kill you last.
Comment on: JetBrains' CEO's "final update" on the licensing model change, and it's still a screw job for developers
Just going to leave the comment I left on there over here in case it somehow disappears:
The perpetual license model being for the STARTing version is just a disingenuous attempt at making the “problem” of dissatisfied customers go away. Honestly, it’s a pretty poor way of going about things, and for users like me who pay for our own licenses, it means the only way to feel secure about what we’re paying for is to always stay a year behind so that we don’t get the carpet jerked out from under us if we ever go off subscription. This is a terrible way to operate.
I’m going to have to think long and hard about ever paying JetBrains again; it might be time for me to look for competing tools from companies that don’t try to disguise a turd as a sandwich.
JetBrains' CEO's "final update" on the licensing model change, and it's still a screw job for developers
8 6 comments 19 Sep 2015 04:00 u/coldacid (..) in v/programmingComment on: Linus Torvalds is tired indeed of "trivially obvious improvements" that are actually buggy
I'm glad that babbies like you will never be kernel contributors, because your precious fee-fees are more important than making something that works well.
Comment on: Github employee attempts to dox user who complained about repo deletion
Unfortunately, you can't PR to a project on GitHub from your Bitbucket account. GitHub needs to die and be replaced with Gittorrent or something actually distributed like that.
Comment on: Where should I migrate my projects to (from Github)?
I use SourceTree at work, but even gitk works better.
Comment on: Where should I migrate my projects to (from Github)?
Bitbucket offers unlimited free repositories, but private free repos are limited to five users (public free repos have no user limit). There's also GitGud.
Comment on: Where should I migrate my projects to (from Github)?
Bitbucket is like the one good Atlassian product/service.
Comment on: Computer Programming to be renamed Googling Stackoverflow
That's when the solutions offered on SO are even correct.
Comment on: Difference between 'programming' and 'coding'?
There's no real difference between them. It's simply a matter of attitude that determines whether 'programming' or 'coding' is more appropriate to use over the other, at any given time.
Comment on: Blast from the past: Transactor Magazine, a journal for 8-bit Commodore systems
They sure were. I miss my C64, so happy that VICE exists to provide really good and performant emulation.
Blast from the past: Transactor Magazine, a journal for 8-bit Commodore systems
3 1 comment 09 Feb 2015 13:43 u/coldacid (..) in v/programmingComment on: Microsoft BASIC for 6502 Original Source Code [1978]
Big white square here.
You forgot your meme arrows