kono_throwaway_da

joined 1 year ago

I mean this is subjective. Asian languages let you play with words freely. When you don't need agreement of verbs and subjects and nouns, you get to make a lot of puns and other kinds of wordplay. See Malay pantuns.

On top of that the grammar is far more regular than whatever bullshit the European languages have. The ber- prefix is always ber-. If you are talking about the past you say sudah instead of juggling with the verbs. No sing-sang-sung do-did-done and all that irregular stuff.

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 9 points 4 months ago (2 children)

The price of electric cars are rapidly falling down to ICE levels in many parts of the world tho

I live in Malaysia a third world country and recently there is a noticeable growth in EV sales over here

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I know plumbers who make $250k/year.

And there are college graduates making 90k/yr in the US. That's why I said efforts are not being compensated properly. The fact that other trades are earning more does not affect this conclusion, think about it more.

Imagine basing your judgement on generational stereotypes. Oh no, millennials. Oh no, Gen Z. Oh no, it must be facebook. What other contributional points can you guys provide?

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

learning in college isn't a requirement for success

Why don't you tell that to the HR departments then? Oh I feel bad for your generation - when basic critical thinking doesn't exist.

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Are they? Or is it because everyone knows their efforts are not compensated properly?

If you want people to not be lazy, pay them. You pay 10 dollars, you get 10 dollars of effort. Blindly labelling this as being lazy is quite a... hear this, a lazy way of thinking. Heh. Millions are studying in university to get a job, I would say that they are working really hard! But are their efforts reciprocated properly?

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 year ago (10 children)

What's stopping you from being rich?

Let's say this is right. Then you should try to explain this: Why are most people not rich?

Did everyone just collectively decide "nah I want to be poor, be stressed and live paycheck to paycheck"? No, of course they don't. No one does.

Your logic is idiotic because you don't realize the rich became rich by exploiting other people, namely the working class.

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 8 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Even those people needed others' work to start their own company my dude. The chips in Apple computers or servers that Google relied on didn't grow on trees. Not to mention that the billionaires you mentioned were educated.

Guess who funded their education. Either directly or indirectly.

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

A few circumstances to consider...

If it's just your own little tool and you don't intend to share it with others: do whatever you want. SQL or NoSQL or JSON, it doesn't matter. Use your own judgement.

In my experience tho most homegrown JSON-based "databases" tend to load all data into the memory, simply because they are very simplistic (serialize everything into JSON and write to disk, deserialize everything into a struct). If your dataset is too big for that, just go straight for a full-fledged database.

This comment section has you covered: to bankrupt a small game company, let's reinstall the games numerous times!

Also, their previous monetization methods are already proportional AFAIK.

Mostly the same here, but I participate in niche communities on both sides. I am just trying to keep the niche communities from dying.

[–] kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

A website should be universal and not dependent on what browser you are using. I say that but we are all suffering from Chromeitis just like Internet Exploreritis in the 2000s...

Web devs never learn.

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