[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 21 points 1 month ago

Tiling window managers and vim keybindings are your friends

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 9 points 3 months ago

Yeah. I bet he wasn't looking for a Boeing maintenance video.

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 months ago

I fully agree. It's supposed to be the scrum masters job to keep that away from the devs so that they can focus.

Management and other stakeholders are also supposed to be in agreement on both the agile method, and also the book of work for the sprint.

Obviously, if some priority changes mid sprint which is important, the team can agree to pick it up at the expense of agreed upon deliverables

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 8 points 3 months ago

Yes. Yes it is. Well, sort of... Basically it's getting a physical deliverable out of the door in a set time frame. Your team agrees that they can do all the work to bring a feature, x, up to spec and out of the door in (usually) two week increments.

However, that requires some caveats. The work is agreed upon by all parties that it's doable - including testing, debugging and deploying. No other work (with the exception of fires etc) is to be introduced to the team in that period. All the dependencies have been highlighted and accounted for. There is a solid, agreed upon definition of done.

However, corpos don't follow this

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 5 points 4 months ago

Dingdingding! We have a winner

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 1 points 4 months ago

Convention is to use the language extension (eg. .py, .sh, .rb, etc.), but I just put my scripts into my '$HOME/bin' directory without. Chmod 700 them and they can be used in my terminal.

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 1 points 4 months ago

Change permissions and it will try to execute. If you have a valid script then you are good to go

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 2 points 6 months ago

My wife says either I'm in IT or I work with computers.
I just say problem solver.

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 104 points 6 months ago

Which is a GDPR violation and should be treated as such when they get caught

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 2 points 6 months ago

Very good point re. Braille readers. I was being flippant and did not think of that. My apologies. Tabs for indentation may be useful there. as would a blind-friendly pre- and post- processor for programming language specific files (a braille liner, could call it black-er for python :)

I don't know how braille readers actuality work, but I guess they process a bytestream. How do they handle utf-16 and other non standard character sets? This is a known problem for a lot of systems- it would be interesting to know how they address it.

[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 1 points 6 months ago
[-] a2part2@lemmy.zip 20 points 7 months ago

Hahahaaaaaha....

....hahahaaaahaa. Nope. They knew

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a2part2

joined 7 months ago