Yes. Am not robot.

  • 0 Posts
  • 15 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 6th, 2023

help-circle

  • Most people are still using Java 8 (including android)…

    Surveys don’t seem to back this up any more… Yes there’s a lot of Java 8 code. But more and more of it is maintenance rather than new development. Respondents of surveys that are able to list the versions they use in production (vs ‘pick one’) have indicated that for many teams with exposure to Java 8, they also have newer versions in production - showing that Java 8 is increasingly about maintenance than ongoing development (with the blocks to moving forward being a mix economic and technical factors).

    The most dominant frameworks in the industry are ending their support for Java 8 - so not too far down the track, staying on Java 8 will mean that while you can pay for platform support, framework support is going to disappear anyway.

    …we are currently at ~java 20.

    Yes Java 20 is the current release, with Oracle’s LTS being Java 17 (the previous ones being 17, 11 and 8 - with 8 having the largest paid support window).

    Java 21 is out in a couple of weeks and will become the new Oracle LTS (other vendors and frameworks tend to align on this LTS designation so it continues to be important).






  • New Zealand doesn’t really have any deadly animals.

    No scorpions, snakes (other than the very appearance of a sea-snake), crocs, large cats, bears, etc. Our most venomous spiders can generally only make most people a little bit unwell. We might occasionally see a potentially dangerous shark but they’re so rare that I can’t recall when a notable attack happened.

    Our insects aren’t generally disease spreaders - though we’ve come close a few times to some getting a foothold.

    Colonists introduced many destructive species but nothing very personally dangerous. In theory there could still be moose, but it seems unlikely.

    The only NZ native land-mammal is a tiny bat as far as I know.

    There is the small problem with orcs, goblins, trolls and Australians… but it’s okay, we have a wizard (retired?).





  • Are they kidding.

    This is slavery, not even indentured servitude, let alone a fair exchange of labour for compensation… There is no point at which the slave is released to make use of those skills.

    Any and all skills gained are either used as tools by the owner, or as coping/survival mechanisms by the slave.

    Slavery is, in all ways, an abhorrent exploitation and degradation of a human being.

    That there is even the slightest tolerance for this curriculum change is appalling. Is Florida really so filled with the morally bankrupt and apathetic that this can pass without ending the careers of the contributors?

    How can we ever expect greater progress on stamping out the ongoing modern forms of slavery, when things like this can make its way into the classroom.

     

    I really hope this change is crushed before it reaches the ears of impressionable children. But the fact that it got this far means that this is the kind of thinking that too many already get at home.





  • All large shops in England have been legally required to charge for single-use plastic shopping bags since 2015 - a move that has seen bags drop by mor then 95 per cent, according to the government. The legal charge was initially a minimum of 5p, but this was raised to 10p in May 2021 in a bid to further reduce usage.

    Doesn’t this approach risk promoting elitism by wealth? Past a given income level that fixed overhead becomes irrelevant.

    So those on a lower income, who are more cost-sensitive, are made to be more responsible for reaching pollution-limiting targets than the wealthy.

     

    I prefer the level-playing field better I think (if only we were applying that to more things here).