I deducted my Xbox 360 and a couple of games on my tax return. And I'm deducting my XBox Live membership this year as well.
Granted, one of my clients is a major game developer.
I deducted my Xbox 360 and a couple of games on my tax return. And I'm deducting my XBox Live membership this year as well.
Granted, one of my clients is a major game developer.
@OldBrooklyn said:
@dynedain said:
So you're really complaining that someone asked you to update a timestamp because it's getting to be several years old?Really? This is a problem for you?
Glad you're not on one of my teams.
No one asked me to update the timestamp (they are going to take care of it themselves by pretending to update the FAQ). I think it's stupid to have a "last updated on" date that is phony. You don't see a problem with this? I'm glad I'm not on your team, too.
If someone has read and validate the info is still correct, what's wrong with updating a timestamp? Especially if this is publicly visible information that can be perceived to be out of date when 3-4 years old.
Something that is tech-related and 4 years old is most likely out of date unless it's documentation on a legacy product/platform.
So you're really complaining that someone asked you to update a timestamp because it's getting to be several years old?
Really? This is a problem for you?
Glad you're not on one of my teams.
@gu3st said:
At this point, SIFR is stupid. @fontface is so universally supported, and there's so many fonts available for free, or with a cheap-ish typekit subscription.
Yes, sIFR is mostly unnecessary at this point. However, many font licenses don't allow for @font-face usage. Depending on corporate brand standards or other company requirements, picking an alternate font is likely not a privilege granted to the designer or developer.
The dialog box is system wide.
Not passing both jpg -and- jpeg as a valid filetype extension when saving an image is Microsoft's mistake when calling the save API from Outlook for Mac.
Part of understanding the problem is the discrepency in how the term "government" is used.
In Europe (and most parliamentary systems), "government" means the coalition of politicians who won the last election and are in power. In the US, we call that the "administration" for the executive branch, and the "majority leaders" for the legislative branch.
In the US, "government" refers to the entire operational buceauracy that encompasses civil services. We use the term broadly to encompass everything from the national, provincial, and municipal level. We never use the term "government" to refer to the ruling coalition.
So in this case, a government shutdown means they've stopped writing checks for civil services. Belgiums lack of a government means they haven't had sufficient coalition amongst the politicians vying for control to form a majority block. Completely different uses of the word government.
And start adding unit tests and automated builds so that it's obvious when someone's commits break the build.
So revert and tell him to fix his code. Easy peasy. Why bother with manually fixing his mistakes.
If he's so problematic, take away his commit privileges, tell him to fork (or at least branch) the project and issue merge requests so someone can peer-review everything he does.
So what? He fixed it.
Why are you making such a big deal about this? Github highlights each line that's changed, even if it's only a single character (that's how diff display tools work in general). When Git does cleanup and compresses old revisions it doesn't matter as it's gzipped away.
@HuskerFan90 said:
I got turned down for lots of internships, mainly because I wasn't a junior at the time of applying
That's because many internship programs are setup with the intent to extend a full-time offer for the following year after graduation (assuming you work out well).