Nothing really surprising to me, but the burnout rate really worries me.
Also having only 5% females in the field is a shame, would love to see that increased over the next decade.
Nothing really surprising to me, but the burnout rate really worries me.
Also having only 5% females in the field is a shame, would love to see that increased over the next decade.
I am curious how this will turn out. Germany is not known for state driven digital innovation and this is a huge project.
Even though I am highly sceptic, I hope they finally manage to get something going because Germany and whole Europe needs more independence from US hyperscalers.
I fear this will die in good old German bureaucracy though.
Took away Admin rights, so everytime you wanted to install something or do something in general that requires higher privileges, we had to file a ticket in the helpdesk to get 10 minutes of Admin rights.
The review of your request took sometimes up 3 days. Fun times for a software developer.
You could also use something like JustTheRecipe.
If you want something for free to get rid of the clutter plainoldrecipe might be a thing. Though the server was down last time I checked
That means that you are probably around 14 years old.
Rule of thumb: don't smack bottoms without consent. Goes either way
If you go for a slow fermentation, I have experienced that almost no kneeding is necessary. But then we are talking of several proofings and total time of at least 24 hours. But instead of taking my unscientific opinion, I raise you The science of Bread. Have fun watching, it's amazing
I have read the text 4 times now, but I neither see a question nor understand what you are talking about. Could you please rephrase?
In Jugoslavia most people saw Tito as a benevolent dictator. Once he died Jugoslavia fell apart. Obviously the history behind it is a bit more complex, but most people I have talked to in those countries saw him as a "good leader" that lead the country in a direction the people appreciated. Propaganda still played a big role in it and people with more historical knowledge will be able to comment a bit better in this topic. But he is the only one who comes to my mind.
As much as I like the idea of pointing newcomers into the right direction, post says basically nothing at all. All 5 points can be used for literally everything not specific to coding really.
Coding and CS in general has become so huge that finding a place to start can be very overwhelming, so just linking some resources won't do the trick.
A beginner should ask himself "what do I like to do" which then would point into a direction of what programming language to use. E.g. "I want to automate my daily tasks" would point towards python. Whereas "I want to make own game' would point towards the unity world and C#. "I want to make my own website" to javascript. And obviously "I want to write almost unreadable loads of boilerplate code" would be java.
From then on your resources could make sense to explore.
Also "talk to people" is easier said then done. Most people not in a programmer bubble don't even have the access, so linking to programming communities would be nice.
Hope my 2 cents help to make it a bit more concrete
The Internet, social media and how we can access absolutely everything from this tiny device
I guess splitting a niche into even smaller pieces would be a bad idea for now, so I would suggest having one combined competitive channel to begin with. Any name suggestions? Should we go with a similar approach as stunfisk and just name it Girafarig/heatmor/whatever or give it a more expressive name like CompetitivePokemon?
Honestly, nothing really. It feels like each year more fucked up things are happening, so I lost the positivity I had for the upcoming years.
Don't get me wrong I am in a good place personally, but with all the stuff going on in the world it sometimes feel hard to believe it's gonna get better any time soon.