It's not just read receipts. It's reactions, replies, and immensely better image quality.
JDubbleu
Obviously this is anecdotal, but of my friends in tech (early to late 20s) I'm the only one who has not used hallucinogens or psychedelics. I don't think a single one of their salaries (not TC) are under $150k.
My partner and I are close to securing a lease in SF and we explicitly picked places that appeared to be owned by a person and not a giant corporation to avoid this BS.
Our current landlord and property manager are both amazing. They tried to get someone out at 8pm when our hot water heater broke, and our rent wasn't raised when our lease went to monthly. If not for wanting to live in the city we'd have likely stayed here for many years.
This is fair, but it's at least broken up so they can selectively gut the parts of it they don't like instead of having to figure out what a 300 line method named "process" does.
This seems more in line with how these OSs should be made IMO. I understand the point of Linux is to do whatever you want with it, but that's antithetical to the point of game ready operating systems like these. Especially when your average user is gonna be less Linux literate than other distros and can easily break something. It's also not like the read-only file system can't easily be modified by those who know what they're doing.
I'd actually argue the complete opposite of OP for developers.
The picture I use for professional stuff is a shoulder up photo of me in front of a brick wall with some greenery in front of it. I'm wearing a black hat, plain shirt, glasses, and a backpack. I've gotten dozens of interviews and recently a new job with this photo that I've used since 2020. I've even received compliments on it being a, "not fake photo".
Being too much of a "suit" in the developer world can actually harm your chances IMO. Meta actively tells interview participants to come as they are and outright says to not wear a tie because in their own words, "we care about your abilities, not your clothes". Obviously clean up and look nice, but that doesn't mean you gotta stress about appearance. I've personally done all my interviews in various hoodies and it's never been an issue or counted against me as far as I can tell.
Obviously fintech and finance is gonna be a little more formal, but I don't personally want to work somewhere where how people dress is anyone's concern.
I had to rewrite our entire scheduling system at work to use Outlook instead of Google Calendar. The guy who wrote the Google Calendar scheduling system made it so unmaintainable that it was faster to just rewrite the entire thing from scratch (1000+ line lambda function with almost 0 abstraction).
At least 90% of what I wrote is just exception handling. There's ~15 different 4xx/5xx errors that can be returned for each endpoint, but only 1 or 2 200 responses.
Pixels come with built in transcription software that can transcribe any audio played by the device. It's super useful for watching videos on mute in public, or providing closed captions for applications that don't support them. It's incredibly accurate and better/faster than every other transcription software I've used. It's also local too thanks to the on-board Tensor chip.
Not to mention people saying, "just ignore every major metro in the US which happens to make up a majority of the population" in response to housing being expensive is ignoring that most people are dealing with housing being way too fucking expensive. Like sure if I go buy a plot of dirt with a house 2 hours from a major population center then of course it'll be affordable. Too bad there's 0 jobs out there and 0 reason to live in the sticks for most people.
274 million people live in or near population centers, with only ~57 million living in rural areas. We can't just ignore that the places with most of the people are becoming unaffordable due to draconian zoning policy and lack of government push for more housing.
Look, I'm as ready as anyone to jump on companies for mishandling data. I work daily with extremely private medical information protected by an ungodly amount of laws, and it pisses me off how whimsical most companies are with customer data. This one wasn't exactly their fault though. If you use the SAME EMAIL AND PASSWORD across multiple different sites it's not site B's fault when site A gets hacked and your login information is attempted on site B. It's also not even that surprising given people willingly giving up information this private aren't exactly the most privacy literate.
Could they have enforced multi-factor 2FA? Sure, and it would've mitigated some of the damage. However, I think we can all reason that they probably had the same password for their email and phone provider. Hardware keys aren't cheap, and most people just don't have them. It's also pretty reasonable that it would take a super long time to figure out someone logging in with a username and password was "hacked".
Chinese and Vietnamese food as well. Southern BBQ too. Tbh just about anything that isn't Vegemite.
No. The majority are taking federally illegal drugs in some capacity.
73% have taken weed in some form in the past year according to a quick Google search compared to 43% of Americans. The California bay area (tech capital of the world) is also very open minded to drugs. I've been to many parties here with people openly using cocaine, shrooms, molly, and acid. Never felt unsafe or concerned for anyone because even at large parties (500+ people) people are always looking out for others and keeping everyone safe.
I honestly didn't believe recreational cocaine use was a thing until moving here and it absolutely blew my mind. I'll personally never touch it, but to each their own.