Gaming threads are always super interesting because you can tell who doesn't know anything about how coding and software development work.Software having bugs does not mean the developers are lazy or incompetent. Software has bugs because if we waited til every single bug was fixed, it would literally never be released.
Hey, my Floppy Disks BetaMax isn't working can you help?That I, a software engineer/website developer, can fix your printer.....
Honestly, I think sometimes that makes it worse. Like, there are people here who believe they know more than they do and make wild assumptions sometimes.Yeah the takes from gamers are wild. Resetera is relatively tame and well informed, but even here I see some crazy stuff once in a while. Different roles exist and members of the same team can have different areas of focus.
With just my cursory knowledge of ballet, my understanding is that it is hard as FUCK.
I decided to see if I could do en pointe for funsies or see how far I could get... Elected to stop such as to not break my toes.
What kind of insurance are you in specifically? Car and home? Health? Life insurance? Etc.
I feel like insurance is one of those fields where people only talk about the mistakes because its not noteworthy otherwise.
There's a ton of ignorance about how taxes work. Every tax season I enjoy the slew of posts like this on Reddit/Twitter:
My favorite part (you can actually see it happen in the above Twitter thread) is when actual tax pros show up and tell people like the OP why they're wrong, and get shouted down by other commenters.
But if I could choose 1 thing I wish every person understood about taxes, it would be how marginal tax rates work. The amount of people that ask questions like, "I got a raise, is this gonna push me into a new tax bracket and screw me over??" is too damn high.
when actual tax pros show up and tell people like the OP why they're wrong, and get shouted down by other commenters.
I work in non-profit. People finally seem to understand that donating food is great, but if you give money instead, you'll feed a lot more people.
.
Oh man. Yah. I don't do food anymore, but I did international work and now environment. The amount of people who are like, "I don't want my money to go to utilities or something, I want it to be for (tangible thing here)."
Cool, but we still have staff that, you know, need utilities to do their jobs that make all this happen. It's just rearranging chairs. Will just move money from our core budget if needed to balance it out.
Basically, donate to a nonprofit you trust and then ... trust them.
It's only a matter of time.Google translate will replace translators. If freaking only I could put my current 300 pages long project through a translator and get a half decent result 😭
When AI can comprehend the surrounding paragraph and draw from real world knowledge and experience to inform its translations
I'm in the funeral industry.
Reality is that most funeral parlors are family operated and service-oriented businesses. Around 50 percent of the businesses are run by women, so the stereotype of the pale middle aged man with grey skin and black suit couldnt be farther from the truth.
The industry has been actually growing, though.
You do shout "OH YES!!!" in a high pitched voice though right?I'm in the funeral industry.
Reality is that most funeral parlors are family operated and service-oriented businesses. Around 50 percent of the businesses are run by women, so the stereotype of the pale middle aged man with grey skin and black suit couldnt be farther from the truth.
And in time it will be able to. I wouldn't be surprised if in 20 years we have something close to a perfect universal translator. Like, 20-years-ago we didn't even have maps of the entire planet at our finger tips and relied on paper or very horrible satellite GPS that cost a fortune.When AI can comprehend the surrounding paragraph and draw from real world knowledge and experience to inform its translations
In a similar vein, legal tender has a very narrow and specific definition (at least in the United Kingdom) regarding debts that has no bearing on everyday life. It does not mean you have the right to pay for this packet of Polos with a £50 note. Whenever a customer started talking about legal currency, The Office came to mind.If something is priced incorrectly you must sell it to the customer for that lower price. While many shops will honor the price if there's not much difference they are under no obligation to do so. You're not legally entitled to get a £400 item for £40 just because a zero fell off the shelf.
True. There's a bit of "it has to have been this" assumptions when a game gets cancelled/delayed/whatever, and usually it's like... probably not, but even if you're right that was a big assumption.Honestly, I think sometimes that makes it worse. Like, there are people here who believe they know more than they do and make wild assumptions sometimes.
So much.
There's a ton of ignorance about how taxes work. Every tax season I enjoy the slew of posts like this on Reddit/Twitter:
My favorite part (you can actually see it happen in the above Twitter thread) is when actual tax pros show up and tell people like the OP why they're wrong, and get shouted down by other commenters.
But if I could choose 1 thing I wish every person understood about taxes, it would be how marginal tax rates work. The amount of people that ask questions like, "I got a raise, is this gonna push me into a new tax bracket and screw me over??" is too damn high.
is a possibility the husband under utilized his withholding allowances and basically owed~5700 which ate up the refund when filed jointly?
As someone who has used Linux almost exclusively for the last 20 years, I find Windows 10 to be horrible.