I think you’ll find that the line between “computer scientist” and “software engineer” is rather blurred.
I think you’ll find that the line between “computer scientist” and “software engineer” is rather blurred.
Depends on the engineer. Some make the software which does the math.
Still says Becky in “Becky says”.
The tracking disclaimer is the standard message you get when an app uses Google ads. Pay for it and there are no ads, and by extension no tracking.
I’m not sure which version of Gnome you used before, but Cinnamon is a fork of Gnome 2 and pretty popular. Looks fairly similar to Windows out of the box. Xfce is another popular choice.
I’m amazed people don’t get the reference to Gnome devs here. I’m not even a Gnome user and I got the joke right away.
If you have ssh/SCP you can use sshfs to mount the remote host as a fuse filesystem. That would let you edit files on your workstation, but more or less all other commands would still need to happen on the remote system.
I don’t see why not. Our bottle opener is a penis. Fun for the whole family!
If they’re a good enough fit, the company might hire them despite not having any open positions. It happened to me once.
Looks like the company is https://www.winterwinds.io/, but they do not appear to have any open job listings at the moment. I assume this is an older screenshot.
I got banned from some sub for calling out people on their shit in some post on the front page. I didn’t even realize what sub I was commenting in. Didn’t matter of course, and my appeal got ghosted.
Looks like Johnny Cash to me, and the quote would make sense from him.
So, you’re talking about ensuring the wl
driver is loaded, but the dump at the end of your post says it’s using brcmsmac
, a different driver for the same card. Looks like you have a mix of both now? It looks like https://wiki.debian.org/wl has a little script you can use to switch between the two, maybe try that.
Isn’t there a separate package with firmware? Maybe install firmware-brcm80211
, firmware-misc-nonfree
or something like that?
Thanks for the correction!
While Apple have contributed to WebKit, they did not make it. It started as a fork of KHTML, a KDE project.
Apple does have some open source contributions. One example is CUPS, which was made by Apple and is now used by most modern Linux distros for managing printers. If you want more examples you’ll have to ask someone who actually likes Apple, I’m sure they can think of more.
Although to be fair most simulation code I’ve come across was written by Physics majors who really shouldn’t be writing code. Most of those implementations are a crime against engineering and humanity alike.
They do the job, though, and I suppose crimes against engineering are better than crimes against physics, if one had to choose.