It highly depends on their contract and if they are a big name or not. There is a reason a lot of bands tour though as they make a lot of more money from it than CD sales.
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Tanoh@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•I'm new to using Ruby and this tickled me pink
2·4 months agoSure, but in Perl and other languages there is a difference between
"$foo"and'$foo'. In that the first expands the value offoo, while the other doesn’t.But usually if you need to write stuff in noisy strings, just use printf/sprintf. Or a <<HERE block.
Tanoh@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@lemmy.ml•I'm new to using Ruby and this tickled me pink
8·4 months agoYeah, you could very well argue that JS and others that use it for weird interpolated strings are the weird ones here.
Mine was convinced that cell phones and landlines were two different networks. Like you couldn’t call a landline from a cell and vice versa. This went on for decades, even after we infront of her proved it worked.
Baptism is such a weird thing.
I think Haskell is such a weird thing
Makes sense, I just never used it so couldn’t say
If it is made in godot or unity (unsure about unreal an others), it would be quite impressive to make it unable to compile on linux. It should be as easy as just chosing another release target.
Sure, if you use a field often it is most likely better to extract it into a column with auto-updates from the JSON data.
But you have to tune it and see what is best for your use case. Just saying that you can add indexes to JSON fields as well!
And you can add indexes on those JSON fields too!
For very basic things maybe, but it has a lot of other weird problems and restrictions. Mutability, no real timezone support, very limited arithmetic, to name a few. As soon as you move beyond the very basic, you want someting more robust.
There is a reason almost everyone use some Date lib, like Luxon and not the built in. And well, having a horrible built in lib that they can’t change due to legacy code breaking is nothing really new or unique to JS.
Tanoh@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Anyone else going basic with their NAS?English
2·6 months agoI open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC.
Similar, but I have a RPI by the TV running LibreELEC and Kodi.
security none existsnt. Aws security tools used to scream at you every time you open the aws console. Solution at the company was to restrict views to those pages so (most) people don’t see the security/vuln reports. To get reports, you’d have to ask cybersec.
Not going to lie, that is hilarious. And forget red flags, you have a whole squadron of semaphores right there.
Tanoh@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How I use Pinchflat/Sponsorblock to avoid podcast adsEnglish
4·7 months agoIt should be doable to so some audio analysis of the episodes. They “always” (I am sure some forget every now and then), have an outro and intro around the ad block. With a clearly defined jingle per podcast. You should be able to make a program that analyses the audio and listens for that block and cuts it out for you.
Or if you want some basic configuration, like user management and repo creation. Use something lightweight like gitolite
Nice rack!
That exact same phrase is used in a very different context in other communities!
Tanoh@lemmy.worldto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Webm supports multiple audio and subtitle tracks inside its RIFF container structure, why the hell arent browsers supporting it???
112·7 months agoOne problem with that use case is that you as the creator doesn’t control where (screen position) and how (font face, size, etc) the subtitles are rendered. The browser and user control that, so I doubt they would be widely used for meme because of this.
However, I do agree that it would be nice to have support for it for other reasons.
Re-binding caps lock is such a nice thing. I am a Perl programmer (yes, really), though not in emacs (vim all the way!)
I changed caps locks to $ and @ with shift decades ago. Especially since in my native layout they are awkward to reach.
And then there are things like strcmp() that uses 0 as true. At least it is for a good reason, but still confusing.

Oh yes.
As the old joke goes:
“Well, we don’t want our future employee to be unlucky… *grabs half of the printed applications and tosses them in the trash*”