Valgrind sometimes has problems with encapsulated C libraries slow anonymous memory leaks. For example, the session caching in modern libcurl is obfuscated fairly well from novices.
Valgrind is good to run as a sanity check, but I prefer a month under a regression test hammer to validate something isn't going to slowly frag itself before scheduled maintenance. =3
There is also a lot of nonverbal data. Imagine the horror of discovering your conversational ML build could hold a plausible verbal conversation only guessing 58% of spoken words accurately... then realizing humans likely fair much worse. =3
TCL is popular for automated scripting, and is still quite popular with "expect" and "autoexpect" package users. The key feature is opening a remote scripted or interactive ssh session, and running setup/install commands admins would otherwise have to type in thousands of times a month (or worse, leave sensitive information/CSR on short lived host nodes.)
Being able to compile ephemeral objects is actually pretty useful in some use-cases. =3
And of course, peculation means misappropriating or embezzling funds. Again, given crypto (and certain notorious crypto exchanges), even more appropriate.
"Humor can be dissected, as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards are discouraging to any but the pure scientific mind." (E. B. White)
Statistically there are always people that try to find entertainment in others misery. Expect a base rate of 1:10 sociopaths, 1:100 psychopaths, and 1:5000 in active psychosis. Those groups covert narcissism means any perceived slight to their ego is never forgiven, and they often try whatever scheme they think they can get away with... The funny part is often at trial these people are honestly shocked their world theory doesn't hold up under community laws.
However, expecting other people to accept personal behavioral choices is also ethically a big ask of society. In some ways, honesty is less insulting than disingenuous sycophancy, or demanding people change to suit your preferences.
One must accept there are bears in the woods, lions on the plains, and poisonous snakes in the grass. Have a great day =3
psychopathy and sociopathy are the same pathology.. they cannot have different occurrence rates. You have obviously no idea what you're talking about. I didn't read the rest of your comment (because why would I?)
Depends when you attended classes, and how you defined the antisocial behavioral spectra. In some ways, the >DSM-5 muddled a lot of disorder definitions to better cover more complex diagnosis under the US healthcare system.
>they cannot have different occurrence rates
I can see how one might reason this to be true, but that is just not consistent with the data collected over the past hundred years.
Psychopaths are born that way, and often start harming pets or other kids very early in life. The Internet just supplied an ecosystem to normalize parasitic behavior, and satiate their demanding egos. Even when proven wrong, they often still insult people during an attempt to apologize.
The most common (layperson) use for the terms I see is that sociopaths are psychopaths who know how to behave themselves. That leads to an obvious difference in occurrence rates.
In general, bad design patterns and team management are the primary drivers for sick projects.
"[O]rganizations which design systems (in the broad sense used here) are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations." (Melvin E. Conway)
Keep in mind Conway's law also works in reverse, try running a private project wiki with documentation, and a ticket/task queue with small tasks.
Setting pie-in-sky project goals is just as bad as ivory tower engineers. =3
Valgrind is good to run as a sanity check, but I prefer a month under a regression test hammer to validate something isn't going to slowly frag itself before scheduled maintenance. =3
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