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Showing posts from September, 2016

preacher or engineer

If your software only uses 8-bit characters, if it does not set an explicit charset , then it cannot handle non-English languages. This excludes 80% of the world - mostly nonwhite people. So developers who don't handle different character encodings are racist. And we do not associate with racists. So we need our own, non-racist versions of all ASCII software; yes, this may take all our lives, but the cause is just, and when it comes to justice there is no calculus, no compromise possible. Are you with me? Or If your software only uses 8-bit characters, if it does not set an explicit charset , then it cannot handle non-English languages. It's silly and extremely inefficient to limit your software's reach so much for the sake of two missing functions. The cost is an hour or two of development; the payoff is increasing your potential userbase by a factor of 6 . This will also expand the pool of potential contributors to your project enormously. And besides, glyph encodi

Notable incorporated words

succession planning (Corp n.): Lining up replacements for senior managers in case of medical or PR disaster. (Think: Cardinal Wolsey in a pantsuit.) to write (Corp v.): to underwrite; to take on the risks of. retrocessionary (n.): Reinsurer of a reinsurer, who is "ceded" part of the first reinsurer's written reinsurance. to productionalise (Corp v.): to produce (test, polish and deploy). halfly (Corp adj.): twice a year (compare quarterly ). Delightful! to downselect (Corp v.): to choose (!) backpocket (n.): Crib notes for the CEO so they don't look totally stupid in interviews. Refers both to the briefing and the people who produce it "My backpocket tell me...". to clopen (worker v.): to shut the shop for the night, then go home to sleep inadequately, then come back and open the shop in the morning. acting up (Corp n.): performing work above one's position to socialise (Corp v.): to spread around; to make accepted. infor