You don’t have to be cool. The whole “nerds can’t get women” thing doesn’t apply after your 20s.
You don’t have to be cool. The whole “nerds can’t get women” thing doesn’t apply after your 20s.
Probably not. It’s super expensive to do it properly. Definitely in the millions of dollars range.
So was my ex, who was kinda hitleresque
Pretty much every customer service you contact is going to be an agent of a 3rd party call center. It’s been that way for decades.
At the one I worked at, only a single person would know how to contact the client directly, and that was the campaign director. And the campaign directors were terrified of contacting the parent company because they didn’t want to lose the contract and get fired (for what? I have no idea).
It took like 8 months for us to even be able to report a serious memory leak issue in one of their proprietary bullshit chat platforms.
Seconded
It really wouldn’t be all that bad. If they’re dropping $2m/y on a database admin, then their BCDR plan must be rock solid with crazy fault tolerances. I’d imagine outages are extremely rare.
But, if they’re dropping that kind of money, you’d have to be an expert in the field. Or know someone.
I did not prove your point at all.
I’m not sure why you think employees should be compensated for the productivity increase that’s created by products the employer is paying for. AI is just a tool, like Excel.
Fair enough, but the free version of acrobat is still a good product for basic PDF functions, and doesn’t benefit them at all by using it.
For the record, I use FF 99% of the time, and GIMP or LibreDraw if I need to edit them.
Why not just use acrobat?
This is software, not a website. And it’s a “feature” not an ad
Just use Firefox for reading PDFs
This isn’t necessarily true. Our company is leveraging AI to take a process that currently takes 18 months down to a few weeks.
Yes, the people who do the 18 month process think it’s going to replace them, but it’s actually going to let them do all of the other things that get shoved on the back burner and never get done.
The toggle bolts I use are rated for 60lb per bolt. The TV isn’t going anywhere.
I make big ass holes, but I use toggle bolts for anything heavy that doesn’t line up with the studs, and those need a 1/2" hole.
Checkout Remote Desktop Manager from Devolutions. It let’s you do pretty much any type of remote connection you need to do, and can even do things like start your VPN for you before accessing a remote resource.
But also super high throughput.
That’s because it’s being advertised as a solution. That’s why you have people worried it’ll take their jobs when in reality it’ll let them do the job better.
Yeah, they think it can turn a beginner dev into an advanced dev, but really it’s more like having a team of beginner devs.
It’s helped me a bit with resolving weird tomcat/Java issues when upgrading to RHEL8, though. It didn’t give me an answer, but it gave me ideas on where to look (in my case I didn’t realize fapolicyd replaced selinux)
That sounds like an issue with your transmitter, not the TVs. It shouldn’t be initiating the pairing process with untrusted devices.