Thank you!
nazgul666
Thank you for explaining!
Can someone explain to me how that appeal-system is supposed to work? As far as I understand, the White House has "escalated" Breyer's decision to the next instance. This instance has now decided that the measures decided on by Breyer will not take effect until a "proper" decision from the next instance is provided. Is that correct?
Its probably worth mentioning that some of those (like the sun cross) are also used as neo-nazi insignia. I am completely in favour of still using them (we shouldn't let nazis spoil century old symbols), but I felt it was important to note.
For switzerland the "stem" type probably only applies to farmers nowadays. The others live in a more nuclear family. 100 years ago the graphic might have been applicable ;)
You have nothing to lose, there are thousands of companies searching for developers. Inevitably, some of them won't invite you to interviews, but there are always others :-)
Regarding blacklists, I don't think that it is common (unless if you insult the interviewing person maybe?). In large companies, they usually have many offerings, so if you are rejected from one, you can just apply for another...
One recommendation could be to send your first application to a company which does not interest you that much. So you can gain confidence without having to be afraid
If I understand this correctly, it only affects certificates issued by public CAs (certificates for public websites, for example). So for certs issued by a company CA (e.g. for internal infrastructure), it should not apply. Can anyone confirm?
When I was working with COBOL and a 30yrs old codebase, I was always scared of majorly fucking up, even when only doing small changes.
Really glad that I am not involved in that project...
Yes sure! Unfortunately most companies which I work for (insurance and banks mostly) still use windows quite often...
From an enterprise IT stance I'd disagree. For phython you need an interpreter, while powershell is available on every random windows 20xx server. It is far easier to do this task in PS than requesting the python interpreter to be installed on the machine and then doing it in python.
The features which I miss the most are:
-
Calc has newly added a feature which is similar to "table formatting" in excel. But the feature behaves very weird IMO (filters dont work, you can't remove the "total" row).
-
I heavily rely on the "smart arts" feature in powerpoint for creating simple visualisations (e.g. to simply visualise an easy process flow). Impress does not seem to have a similar feature.
Imo debloating the apps itself is not possible. To do that, you would need to somehow decomplie them, change the code, repackage them and install them as custom applications. This might be possible in theory, but is not feasible in a real-world scenario.
I recommend the following two options: