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Blazor? Razor pages?

But why did the bots star his repo? What was the benefit from that?


I have the same question, but there is no answer. Other people reported the same thing around the same time that happened to me. I guess to avoid bot detection, but not sure.


There are so many issues with what you have here… where to start…

You aren’t running tests, unless you put them in the dockerfile which is a bad idea…

You aren’t running security scans. how do you deploy manifest changes? Using Latest as a tag has so many issues.

This is a trivial and niave pipeline I would expect from a junior or intern.

Build pipelines are becoming more complicated because software is more complex. You can still promote ownership of the full pipeline while giving developers control.

Don’t shy away from it, understand it, embrace it. It’s just going to continue getting more complex


Adding steps for code quality scanning, dependency vulnerability analysis and a license scanner certainly makes it look like you actually achieved something in the next performance review, I will give you that.


I was homeschooled and it affected me terribly. Please don’t do it.


I was homeschooled and I got a fairly strong education.

What matters is your parents and how you nurture your kids and provide opportunities for them. It’s easy for homeschooling to be bad… if you don’t give a shit about your kids.

For socializing, the key part is making sure kids are involved in a lot of social activities. I never went to public school, but found my groove socially pretty quickly in college, because I had a lot of opportunities for strong friendships. I was working part time in high school too, so got some exposure to pop culture.


> I was homeschooled and it affected me terribly. Please don’t do it.

Any idea how many were affected terribly in school? I'm in touch with my high school classmates. Almost half of them blame the school experience to lifelong problems.


Everyone from my public high school class is now rich and happy. My anecdote is just as good as yours.


Nobody is saying public high school is worse than homeschooling. They are saying that if you want to claim homeschooling is bad for kids, you have to put in the work to show that it causes problems at a higher rate than the public school system.


> Everyone

Did you grow up in Scarsdale or Palo Alto?


And just as good/bad as the top level comment, which is my point.


I was homeschooled and got a good education, and am now a happy, well adjusted adult. You can't just generalize; you have to consider the individuals and methods involved to judge what the best approach is.


What works for one might not work for another one. Can't generalize.


We can actually. It's called theory of probability and statistics, which is probably "forgotten" by these amazing self-appointed homeschoolers. A few rare successes of homeschoolers doesn't mean this practice is good on average, and vice versa the rare failures of the public education system doesn't mean that it is bad on average.


Most times I look this up, I see stuff like "[t]he home-educated typically score 15 to 25 percentile points above public-school students on standardized academic achievement tests".

https://nheri.org/research-facts-on-homeschooling/#Academic


Looking at the replies, I do not think the general complaint is that homeschooling is bad for test scores but social development and preparing kids for society outside the house. It definitely requires considerably more, active attention from parents. Perhaps some of these people here have both the time to be hold down a decent career and also tutor their child in multiple curricula that haven't been important to them in decades and ensure that they're maintaining an active social life but I think the difficulty of nailing that as you go-your-own-way is apparent.


>I do not think the general complaint is that homeschooling is bad for test scores

>Perhaps some of these people here have both the time to be hold down a decent career and also tutor their child in multiple curricula that haven't been important to them in decades

This reads as an inconsistency.

As for the social stuff - as I commented elsewhere, it's not hard to make a case that public school is bad for socialization as well. Which isn't to say that public school isn't irredeemable in that way, just that it's not like one or the other is an obviously correct choice.


Yeah, that study has been debunked or countered by "... among home-educated students applying for college", and the proportion of home schooled kids who apply for college versus those in the traditional education system is far lower, i.e. this is very self-selecting.


Where was it debunked?


This comment is so disingenuous. Few and rare?? Why would you frame it like this? Homeschoolers are better educated, more likely to get into college, and have better socialization skills than their publicly educated peers.

https://nheri.org/research-facts-on-homeschooling/#:~:text=r...

https://chewv.org/college-preparation/college-admissions/?ut...

https://nheri.org/research-facts-on-homeschooling/?utm_sourc...


They're not more likely to get into college as a whole. In fact, they apply to college a lot less. But in that subset, against public education as a whole, then yes, they do better.

You may want to look wider afield than homeschooling advocacy and lobbyist groups for your stats.


If you've got the statistics to validate your point, show them. If not... pot, meet kettle.


How so?


Mostly, yes.

You have a spend limit, but the assistant has dozens of of models


I’ve found writing a MCP server with access to the docs cloned locally does wonders.


If you use cursor you can just attach the documentation. Same thing, different method.


I don't know context is still an issue if you have lots of docs in my experience.


If you grade on pass/fail it’s easy to grade. Not every course uses letter grades…

If you let people use AI they are still accountable for the code written under their name. If they can’t look at the code and explain what it’s doing, that’s not demonstrating understanding.


1hz seems slow to me. A company that I worked at was designing robust industrial, apple airtag/tiles with a specific application 8 or 9 years ago.

BLE operates on a very crowded frequency. WiFi, Bluetooth, etc are all on the same frequency and spamming out thousands of packets constantly.

We had to triple our broadcast frequency and period in order to reliably detect a beacon within 5 seconds of a phone being in range.

We settled on 200ms frequency and broadcast for 15ms.

Our decide had a 10 year battery life on a couple coin batteries…


I find it very intriguing you landed on 200ms, considering the default beacon rate of the majority of WiFi access points is 100ms. Clients do not like going much longer before you start dropping beacons and discoverability tanks... which is shown in your results. Genuinely fascinating.


>We had to triple our broadcast frequency

What do you mean by this ?


I think they meant triple how often they broadcast, not using a radio frequency x3 higher on the spectrum.


That answers my question perfectly, thankyou!


If there aren’t any fines, why should Waymo fix bugs?

If there isn’t any threat to Waymo they are incentivized to fix bugs…


Workflow core is more like airflow


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