This chart would be more readable if the corruption perception index were explained by having the polarity of the scale labeled. I.e. is green “corrupt” or not?
By following the source link, it looks like green = “clean” and gray = “corrupt”.
Professional software engineer, musician, gamer, amateur historian, stoic, democratic socialist
This chart would be more readable if the corruption perception index were explained by having the polarity of the scale labeled. I.e. is green “corrupt” or not?
By following the source link, it looks like green = “clean” and gray = “corrupt”.
Do you think Valve is going to start deleting accounts over 100 years old?
Wow. I would love to here from the mods how my comment was breaking the rules of a memes community.
You don’t know me.
What? That’s just not a good comparison.
People don’t shoot up drugs in a roll of toilet paper.
People pee on the sidewalk regardless of whether public restrooms exist.
We have other problems to fix before we can safely bring back free public restrooms.
Removed by mod
I get usable results for “Boards of Canada”. You’ve got some personal problems happening.
Despite what developers do at the end of the day, there are conventions for application directories on every OS.
I just use the directories
crate in Rust.
I’m pretty sure that’s not what edge computing is. You’ve just described client-side computing.
The “edge” is similar to a CDN. Usually some kind of application layer code that’s running in an ISP data center rather than in a cloud provider’s data center.
How does it maintain privacy?
Sorry I know this isn’t funny but I am now imagining a desperate game of Scrabble and the winner gets a pittance of rice.
I believe so, but I’d have to do a little more research to say with certainty. There is a particular supreme court case that serves as an example. See Tillman v Wheaton-Haven Recreation Association.
That’s a US Supreme Court case. The OP case is in Australia.
I’m not familiar with discrimination laws in Australia. In the US there are exceptions in the Civil Rights Act (1964) for “private clubs” though I don’t think courts have consistently defined what that means.
I’m very curious to hear how this case turns out under Australian law. Personally I think it’s counterproductive to exclude trans women from a women-only social club. But if a US court ruled this social club was in fact a “private club” then they could legally discriminate in whatever way they desire, be that by excluding men or trans women.
NixOS is at least starting to work on a new wiki. The old one is gone and is only accessible from archive.org.
Delta AMEX offers a “free” checked bag on domestic flights.
Tidal is great but IIRC it either doesn’t support Amazon Echo or the integration is poorly implemented.