I built a #Formula1 predictions game :) It's got social features like leagues etc..
Basically just predict the top 5 drivers and teammate head-2-head battles each race weekend and compare how you did with friends.
Looking for constructive feedback...
https://t.co/CThlL4Zrr3
@theo Like seriously the could continue to start resetting the weekly limits at 4:30am for every week 30 mins before original 5am weekly reset and post about how amazing they are, but that really doesn’t change anything for me…
MSW Panel v0.3.0 is out 🎉
Mostly a quality-of-life release:
• a11y improvements
• panel open state persists across refresh
• individual settings for grouped handlers + auto-refresh
Small touches that are already helping me daily at work.
Release notes:
https://t.co/I8EJCzJB4N
#MSW #A11y #OpenSource
My Race top 5 for the Spanish Grand Prix 🎯🏎️
P1 🇮🇹 ANT
P2 🇬🇧 HAM
P3 🇬🇧 RUS
P4 🇳🇱 VER
P5 🇬🇧 NOR
Think you can beat me on @GrandPrixPicks?
#F1#SpanishGP#BarcelonaGP
https://t.co/dVY3hr6VxE
@chriszeuch The company I used to work for retrenched their entire QA team. And I'm for it, those guys were pretty useless.
The company I am in now, we love our QA team, they're a crucial part to ensuring quality throughout our development lifecycle (and we are quite AI native here).
I’m seeing a rising movement around changing coding standards to make them better for AI to code, instead of humans.
This doesn’t make much sense to me.
If you make code better for humans to work with, coding models benefit too.
These concepts aren’t mutually exclusive. They almost completely overlap.