@NitinSub What if you add a .env file with secret keys to your project and forget to add it to .gitignore before doing running this command?
IMO you should always review the files and changes you are committing, especially before you push them.
@hnasr@unclebobmartin How would the over-the-wire protocol work for something like this?
One nice thing about SQL is that it lets you make 1 RPC to a database that encodes all of this logic. Using a more granular API is cool, but it might mean more RPC calls and that could impact performance
@sampullara@terronk I think its just a side effect of how the notes app does its indexing. It seems like you can search for words by their prefix, but not a substring in the middle. That's why searching for "bulb" does not return "lightbulb"
Doing this right is tricky.
- A copy editor will need to review the notes which
- international apps will need to translate the release notes
- what goes in the release notes when features are not tied to app builds? Many modern apps will remotely enable features once enough users have installed the build
- bugs and their corresponding fixes are not always easy to explain in simple language
- very few users read the release notes. Most users just have their apps auto update
@canalCCore2 Wouldn't this system still require software in the loop to measure the output intensity of the light, to figure out how to adjust the glass, and to make the actual adjustments?
Or do you have a way to do this with a purely analog approach?
@kelseyhightower Not sure if you knew, but Apple specifically has a program from giving retail employees a chance to work at corporate (Career Experience Program). I knew a few full time employees who got hired this way.
@CFDevelop Someone is building a house and instead of outlets they decide to select devices and attach them directly to the power
What would happen if they wanted to replace the fridge or a lamp with a different one?
Outlets let us change the devices we have in the future
@lrhaughton@pxue This article was written before the iPhone was even released. It's not a review.
The article basically says that Apple should stay away from the smartphone market because the incumbents (Nokia, Motorola) control too much of the market, and the margins are too small
@ZarifAli9 Here was the status quo for mobile phones in 2006: https://t.co/QEW1hx9wQW
When the iPhone was released in 2007 it was remarkably better: bigger screen, full web browser, capacitive touch screen, intuitive UI/gesture support
@we4v3r Can you link any old articles with examples of how "People scoffed and berated Apple and early adopters" ?
The reviews I came across from 2007 seem fairly positive: https://t.co/XTJ6xKYoR1