IDK, the National Museum of African American History serves fried chicken every day, so they don’t think there’s anything wrong with it.
IDK why people are interpreting your question about the mechanics of everyone switching at the same time. It sounds to me like you’re asking more about the bigger picture problems it would solve with society, not whether the sudden change would be able to be handled by the banks. Is that what you’re looking for?
Moving to a credit union is a great idea. I did a long time ago and haven’t looked back.
There are some things they don’t offer, sure, but then for stuff like investments I use dedicated platforms for those which is a better experience anyway.
This should 100% be illegal.
It wasn’t clear to me from the post that it isn’t genuine. I interpreted the post to mean that it wasn’t famous in some way, just a standard issue dagger, but that it wasn’t a reproduction.
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Don’t forget Englandic people.
I just saw Betterment’s cash reserve accounts can go up to $4 million per person for FDIC.
Rust is mainly designed to overcome common memory problems people have with low level C systems without the overhead of garbage collectors
So you didn’t read my comment then.
A concrete example of what my comment means is opening files. When you open a file handle, you can read from it, write to it, but then you should close it. After you close it you shouldn’t be ready to or write from it again. If you do, bad things can happen.
Rust is the only language where you cannot. It’s a compile time error. This has nothing to do with low level systems programming. Using file handles is very high level.
Same goes for thread safety. Web servers often can benefit from multithreading. Java does not enforce thread safety at compile time. If you send some data across threads and you don’t already understand what is thread safe and what isn’t, you’ll end up with data races, which is a form of memory safety violation. This is not possible in Rust, but it is in Java.
Rust also isn’t subject to “the billion dollar mistake” since it doesn’t have the concept of null references. It also doesn’t support exceptions, which are the exact same issue as null references. These are also general programming problems and not specific to low level systems.
Regarding frameworks, I’ve used Spring before and, although Rust doesn’t do some things Java frameworks do, IMO that’s a very good thing, and the web frameworks I’ve used in Rust have been a far better experience than what I saw from Spring.
“Having a car with no seatbelt is not a problem if you’re a good driver”
LMAO
Rust is a general purpose language which is excellent for API servers and many other things. I’d say it’s definitely a direct competitor to Java. The only difference is in the ecosystem of libraries.
Rust’s type system is really just about enforcing correctness, which is very important in a general sense. Memory safety is just a subset of correctness.
You can see this is in practice since there are a TON of devs like myself coming to Rust from JavaScript.
You friend is insane and making the problem worse. Tell them to stop.
Even in the US, where tipping has been out of control for a long time, nobody in their right mind tips for takeout. The employee literally didn’t do a damn thing other than a couple seconds of handing you a box and possibly cashing you out.
What’s the point of that?
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Nah, better to ask on Lemmy
That seems like a reasonable approach though, unless I’m missing something. If you need “loads of credit cards” then you’re already but living within your means.
throw NullPointerException;
I mean, one of the legendaries is basically a starter that you ride like a motorcycle. It’s too easy to make fun of.
Can we stop posting this idiotic article?
Next we’ll see “Bleach kills cancer. Why don’t we inject it into your veins?”
No, he didn’t. Check out the John Stewart highlights of it. It was horrible.