My neighborhood has a number of friendly outdoor cats. Id say at least half of them will run up to me and let me pet them
hascat
Yes please. Many times when I add a feature I end up refactoring some of the code first to better accommodate it.
I'm tired of hearing about this game already.
slower
How fast do you need your phone to be for sending messages, streaming video, or browsing the web? Every phone made in the last decade can do these things.
no headphone plug
This used to be something I cared about until I found a bluetooth headset I really like. Going wireless is fantastic, in my opinion.
Teams definitely feels bloated, but having used it for years at my lost job, I can't say I ever found it buggy. The only issue I ever had with it was actually with my bluetooth headset sometimes not being recognized, but it was never clear if that was an issue with Teams, or Windows, or the headset itself.
The Outlook integration for planning and joining meetings was super handy. If there was some way to get email in Teams then I never would have had to open Outlook again. That would have been nice.
I think the features need a lot of refinement, though. Having threaded and non-threaded chats is clumsy at best. I found the threaded chats to be far inferior, and the inability to search for non-threaded chats was very limiting. Search in general was borderline useless.
Are there any good strategies for avoiding painful upgrades?
If you're not already doing so, hold design reviews with your users. Breaking API changes should be communicated early and in a way that makes it clear how the users benefit from the change. If the users don't benefit, you should reconsider why you're making changes in the first place.
My black cat does the same thing when she wants her tummy rubbed.
While this looks like a handy tool, it does make me think shell scripting itself needs a cleaner approach than what we have currently.
Officials immediately safed the Gemini North telescope and stowed the massive instrument.
While it's good to be cautious, it's wild that hardware would be exposed to external actors in any way.
While I do enjoy cheesing fights in BG3, I've run into a few which seemed impossible if I didn't find a way to cheese it, which is kind of a bummer. Shoving the big bad off a cliff should be a strategy, but shouldn't be the only one.
There's no way this is real. Completely insane.