The actual meaning of words is defined by how people use them. Serverless has a very specific, well-defined meaning despite its seemingly contradictory etymology.
Sounds like Sweden, except the chaotic booking system.
I don't think I've ever seen a diesel train, ever. In fact, for a long time I was (blissfully) unaware of their existence and the fact that they do exist still surprises me...
Only English is not a problem in Sweden (especially Stockholm), and we hire foreign engineers all the time. Some companies have a majority of foreign born engineers, with a wide range of backgrounds (Brazilian, Russian, Spanish, American, etc.)
Ofc, salary comparisons are hard to make vs. the US, but you can live comfortably on an engineer's salary in Sweden.
Some of the biggest "modern" companies include DICE, Klarna and Spotify. More traditional ones are Ericsson, Scania and Volvo.
Hiring is a bit slow right now though, so that has to be kept in mind.
Yes, a reduction in yearly emissions. But that doesn't mean that the CO2 in the atmosphere suddenly disappears. We're still adding to it, just not as much as before (hopefully).
But that's the thing: if we are not adding as much as before then we should observe NOAAs chart curving, instead it still looks like a straight line (of course, it could also be that this reduction is so small that is not visible on the chart)
We use self-hosted yopass at work. Works great and since the link only works once you can simply send the URL with the decryption key to the receiver. If they can open it, the secret is safe to use!
Unfortunately this is an anti-feature for almost all large corporations. There is inevitably a security scanner somewhere that consumes the link before the user can.
You're right, but yopass let's you send the link and decryption key separately. The link is only destroyed if the secret is decrypted, not if you just reach the prompt to supply the key.
But at age 6 you've already been immersed in the language for 6 years. The problem there is to link it to its written form.
When you learn a second language you have the baggage of the first language hindering you (talking about orthography here), and you normally don't start by speaking the language exclusively for 6 years before learning how to read. If you don't know what the language is supposed to sound like, of course it's hard to understand how to read in it.
> The people in nordic countries seem so naive to me. They trust their governments, their authorities to do this stuff, to both determine the greater good and then implement it. The political class couldn't possibly act immorally, for their own benefit, apparently.
Not everyone is happy with this change, if that makes you feel better.
Also, this is implemented by the city, by real people (yes, politicians are people) that Stockholmers voted for.
Political class as a concept doesn't make much sense in Sweden, just FYI.