Clue me in please? Looks like a still from cheesy TV-only publication.
aev_software
I think my country quickly will find out how powerful the EU really is.
The EU may be nothing more than a trade agreement seeking the most profitable ways to profit, but they really don't like dictators telling them how to make that happen for billionaires who aren't in the EU.
Cronies be cronies. And our cronies are better than yours.
One judge rules you can be a public nuisance while protesting. Another says you can't. Time for a higher court to rule.
Just move to South Carolina or Texas already.
"Vintage". You and I have a different notion of the passing of time. Cowboy Bebop was released in my twenties.
Of course they fail. What would they do? Oppose their main sales channel for boycotting them?
Sure we will. Until our main sales channel decides to boycott us...
For real. Trying to second-guess what others are thinking or implying is a whole separate skillset. And some of us do that professionally...
magic
(Sprinkles of fairy dust)
Not sure whether that is a c# specific challenge. Does c# not know the concept of laziness?
Haskell famously is lazy, and so are Java message streams: memory objects simply don't get created unless you use them.
I can understand that being a problem for trivial benchmarks, but I would assume a benchmarker to have that level of understanding, and otherwise catch up fairly quickly. I also had to learn about laziness when things just didn't want to do anything at all. The compiler just optimized it all away because it wasn't being used, as far as it could tell.
And flutter devs everywhere tear out their hair because their managers tell them to update something completely out of their control.
Meh, that barely fits an empty MS Word doc...
/s