> In accordance with the FOMC implementation note issued December 10, 2025, the Open Market Trading Desk (the Desk) at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York will make the following adjustments to standing overnight repurchase agreement (repo) operations effective December 11, 2025.
After a few weeks of trials with Termux, I finally gave up and switched to Terminator. Much easier! AFAIK Termux can work in non-GUI systems so maybe that's its advantage?
Buy from GoG instead. It's better. At least you can download the install files and don't need to install any 3rd party software to login to play them. I have 200+ games on Steam but I have ceased purchase on Steam.
I think I'll judge that by looking at how convincing their arguments are (some are not, I think), not by raw output. After all they already output a lot.
He wrote this whole game in it. Apart from that, a couple dozen or hundreds of beta-testers. Not sure whether the language ever gets released, maybe he's too worried about having to maintain it and not being able to change it anymore.
I guess none of us really needs those 9s, and even two 9s are just good enough. I even doubt whether *SOME* of the banking transactions really really really need those 9s too -- like, I don't really mind if 1 out of 100 credit payment doesn't go through so I have to do it again -- it does happen once for a while and I just swiped it again.
GitHub has a container registry. That going down can cause pod start failure. I agree the source code probably doesn't need infinite nines, but the container registry is different.
I had an ATM glitch out on me a few months ago, I tried again and it confiscated my card. I called, and they explained that it is the failure mode to prevent people modifying them while they're offline.
People have to be interested in their jobs to care about it. Corporations know that people rarely get to do whatever they want, so they assume (correctly) that most workers do not care, so they move on to care about processes, workflows, which makes even less workers care about their jobs.
For individual workers, the best thing is to work @ something you love && get good pay. Like a compiler engineer, a kernel engineer, an AI engineer, etc.
- Requirements are rarely clear from the beginning;
- We (DE) are not enabling self-service and automation so we are drowned in small requests (add this column for example;
- Upstream rarely notify us about the changes so we only know when downstream alerts us. We end up building expensive pipelines to scan and send alerts. Sometimes the cost of alerts > cost of pipeline itself;
- We have so many ad-hoc requests that sprint is meaningless. If I were the manager I'd abolish sprint completely;
- Shadow knowledge that no one bothered to write down. I tried to write down as much as possible, but there are always more unknowns than knowns;
Working in DE definitely gives me enough motivation to teach myself about lower level CS.
That's why populist movements raise its head from time to time. It's the human's self-cleansing mechanism -- very damaging, and usually burn much more than necessary, but whatever.
> In accordance with the FOMC implementation note issued December 10, 2025, the Open Market Trading Desk (the Desk) at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York will make the following adjustments to standing overnight repurchase agreement (repo) operations effective December 11, 2025.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/standing-overn...
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