They’re talking about operationally. They don’t want to configure and distribute a bajillion dongles to users.
They’re talking about operationally. They don’t want to configure and distribute a bajillion dongles to users.
I never claimed you did. I just clarified which plan you were on, and added how their other plan works. This could be nice for others to know. I don’t know why you’d take that as a personal attack, but I certainly didn’t intend it as one.
I can’t be bothered to research every plan to answer this question, but Mint Mobile was dirt cheap while using T-Mobile service. They probably still are, but it arguably doesn’t count anymore since T-Mobile acquired them.
This is the Unlimited Plus plan. Their Simply Unlimited plan throttles you after 5 GB of hotspot usage, but phone data is unlimited.
They absolutely can, several carriers who use other carriers are cheaper than who they lease service from. They won’t be paying consumer prices to use those towers.
It all depends on what margins they have, what extra services they provide, and whether they have other ways of monetizing you. They might even be reselling at a loss to boost their initial market share. In Google’s case, it’s safe to assume they want your data and sacrifice some margins to get it.
Thank you for explaining that it was a joke.
That requires someone to look at that section in the IDE. If it doesn’t block the merge, it doesn’t do shit.
Golang won’t even compile with dead code. Unfortunately that’s too strict, you just end up commenting out the whole block instead. At least the commented out code is obvious in review, and some automated checks catch it if you have them.
I did the same thing with “DO NOT MERGE” back in the day. Saved some people who didn’t even know about the check.
Yeah, that’s what I was implying, just didn’t want to write a whole novel about it.
Using a file system is much less bad than dynamically allocating memory, at least as long as you keep a predefined set of files.
I have just the thing for you! Ever heard of binary XML?
I don’t know, but my guess would be people gaming the algorithms. Search results have also gone to shit after everyone SEO-ed them to death, and this is probably the same.
My favorite optimization is this restaurant in NYC called Thai Food Near Me:
YubiKeys have almost every imaginable form factor these days. Here’s the USB-C version without NFC: