Yeah, Doc, I’m not sure what’s wrong with me, but it seems like I have an early breakfast or a late dinner…
Yeah, Doc, I’m not sure what’s wrong with me, but it seems like I have an early breakfast or a late dinner…
Arrest and jail each one. Don’t make death threats at people.
My guess would be something like ‘of being a race traitor’ based on the language I’ve heard that crowd use previously.
A lot of it seems to be “third spaces” (or maybe it’s “places”?) going away; it went from work, home, and [church, moose, lions, whatever] to mostly just work and home (or work and work and home) for many and this had a lot of negative impacts, I think.
Yes but also no as Steve von Trig discovered it a thousand years before and of course gets none of the credit.
/ the Pythagorean Theorum is far older than Pyth.
Yeah, I’m generally overseas and many things need a US number for 2fa. It’s the only thing that I still need it for. Translate as well for Japanese.
These are older lessons and I’m generally pretty effective at pushing back on those now. I’m not a manager, though, so I can be overruled.
“Do this as a temporary measure. We will code it properly later” —> code that is hackish and will never be replaced.
“We need you to do this one time because of someBullshit” —> congratulations, your team had to do this thing outside of your specialty, even though there exists a team dedicated to it, and now we’re just going to make you do it over and over again (despite, again, a whole team dedicated to that existing).
Hopefully it’s not too heavy a lift.
Well, that’s a new one (assuming it’s not referring to a physical object) to me
It really depends. A lot of Japanese these days are more toast-and-yogurt than the traditional Japanese breakfast (which itself varies regionally). For that, though: some kind of soup (probably, but not necessarily, miso), grilled fish, various pickled veg, possibly a small salad, etc.
Come to think of it, I’ve never seen a specific breakfast cup noodle here in Japan. People do eat normal ramen and whatnot for breakfast. Pancakes wouldn’t be in it, though; those are considered dessert here. Edit: and maple syrup is not super popular with them (maybe at Denny’s or somewhere, but most pancake places are jams, chocolate, powdered sugar, etc.)
I do Rust and Go and VSCode has been fine for both so far. I put off trying it for ages out of a hatred/distrust of MS products, but I’m quite happy with it.
I never learnt them and don’t remember seeing them, but that’s neat :)
If the blue pick is a broken toaster oven, I’m still voting for it rather than tump
What, you don’t place a wrench in the middle of all your communications for safety? heh, I shouldn’t post whilst tired.
Good News! Unless something has changed since I worked in healthcare IT, those systems are far too old to be impacted!
I’m half-joking. I don’t know what that kind of equipment runs, but I would guess something embedded. The nuke-med stuff was mostly linux and various lab analyzers were also something embedded though they interface with all sorts of things (which can very well be windows). Pharmaceutical dispensers ran various linux-like OS’s (though I couldn’t even tell you the names anymore). Some medical records stuff was also proprietary, but Windows was replacing most of it near the end of my time.
One place we had ran their keycard system all on a windows 3.1 box still. I don’t doubt some modern systems also are running on Windows which has interesting implications for getting into/out of places.
That said, a lot of that stuff doesn’t touch the outside internet at all unless someone has done something horribly wrong. Medical records systems often do, though (including for billing and insurance stuff).
'cause it’s a tubular word, doy. (and for a brief moment, I was a kid in the '80s again)
Something expensive is spendy.
My dictionary doesn’t think so, heh. Webster seems to say “chiefly Northwestern US” so that may explain it. I remember rolling my eyes and thinking that it sounded like something a self-important jackass would say. (edit: the first time I heard it, I mean).
I don’t think I’d ever use it, but I also don’t see it as weird or wrong anymore. Melty is fine. Slippy still grates on me a bit, but I can let it slide.
Definitely both exist in Japanese and they are used fairly frequently.
一昨日 day before yesterday 昨日 yesterday 今日 today 明日 tomorrow 明後日 day after tomorrow
Further, the actual wedding is also done at the municipal office and costs little/nothing.