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FizzBuzz is an incredible filter for devs. Any kind of async JavaScript that needs to do something with the data after it fetches it has also been a winner. Lately the biggest weeding tool has been asking candidates to fetch some JSON from a bucket, then visualize that data. I'd say that maybe half the people manage to fetch the data in 30 minutes, and of that, maybe 10% get the data fetched within 10. The other 20 minutes is trying to help them recognize that their data is initially being rendered with "undefined" and they have to update the viz.


But are you filtering for realistic performance, or for performance under time & observer pressure?

I did a .. bit more complex than fizzbuzz but similar toy problem sort of thing recently, and it's nothing I can't do, it passed the visible test cases (HackerRank if you're familiar, I haven't used it before but I assume it's generally similar) etc. but it was clumsy and far from representative of what I'd actually write on the job I think. Even if I still only spent an hour on it, just not having that pressure. Plus I suppose I would likely have seen the problem before in planning, and realistically it would be something within the context I was familiar with from working on it every day, not the toy problem. (This wasn't it, but imagine something like calculating the possible states of a chess board after each player makes another move. Bit simpler though.)


Or they come and tell you it’s last order, 30 minutes later they bring you the check, and say thank you for coming.

This is even if you’re paying continuously.


They do, it’s called the library.


This is one of the few things that cryptowallets have brought to the mainstream through things like Metamask. Signing for actions is one of actions Metamask brings forward in terms of usability. Shame that it has to be tied with with crypto or the crypto “web3” world.


It’s a non-zero cost to develop the game. I sympathize with your desire to build an mmorpg that will pass the test of time without relying on servers, but you will definitely need a lot of money to make this come true. Crypto or otherwise.

Block times are complete state updates. The transactions that rely on the state of another transaction in the chain are 100% optimistic, and will roll back all dependent transactions. Now, that’s fine if you’re willing to roll back say…3000ms of your game state. But that’s all client side stuff, and that code is 1000% exposed, and you can’t upgrade it in the normal fashion. You also need validators for chain transactions, and your game can just be forked at any time by validators, splitting the player base. Kind of cool, but kind of defeats the balance and minimum population required to keep a game running. Also…the validators still need to run. Recovering a forked chain can only happen is someone has the state somewhere and is willing to seed new validators.

Sometimes, things need to end for another thing to begin. Sometimes it’s just best to move on.


And having a lawyer or notary go over every line of the sale contract to ensure that you understand it. Real property comes with real responsibility, far beyond that of the financial realm.


Nodes rise because businesses that want to build on the chains require them unless they want to a pay far too much for a wrapper API. The number of wallets is literally unbounded, and it’s impossible to know precisely how many entities are attached to those wallets. I am one person. My tens of wallets are only for one person. I make a new wallet every time I try new wallet apps. I make new wallets to try new things. “Number of wallets” and “number of nodes” is a bad metric.


Employer of Record services have solved this for about $200 - $600/worker/month. Still significantly cheaper than paying a US worker.


> No issue unless you fix it back up when you move out.

You can be completely prohibited from "damaging" things, including painting, in many jurisdictions. You also may have to match whatever grade of paint the landlord used. Some will use very expensive paints, or totally inappropriate paints, knowing it will lead to large deposit forfeiture, or the ability to collect excessive monies from the tenant.

> There must be laws in Germany, because I don't remember living in an apartment where the windows weren't top notch. That's also very necessary with temperatures sometimes going below -10°C.

In many apartments, especially illegal suites, you might not even get a window. The heating is your problem if the windows suck, and while in some jurisdictions there might be necessary temperature ranges the landlord must maintain, that's only if it's a "utilities included" apartment. Your heating bill could bankrupt you.

> Like all appliances, furniture, anything, it's "bring your own" in Germany (unless you have a common laundry area... not super common I think).

Often not the case, and is often a "feature". Again, it targets poor people, who then have a lower quality of life, and higher revolving costs. It's expensive to be poor.

> Same as before, as long as you fix up the holes when you move out, not an issue.

As before, you may be flatly prohibited from doing any damage to a wall.

> Don't know about solar panels. Like windows, never lived in an apartment without proper insulation in Germany (in the US on the other hand...).

Canada would like to have a word regarding insulation. Same with Australia, Japan, the US, etc. You can't make structural changes to a rental, and that definitely includes solar panels. You can negotiate something with the landlord, but it doesn't stop them from evicting you after it's done. You'll need a lawyer.

> You can put in whatever floor you like as far as I know, and I've done so.

Nope. You might be able to negotiate it, but you'll need a lawyer.

---

When you rent, and you don't have a lot of money, it's fucking terrible. Low quality housing, low quality appliances, low quality life. It has higher revolving costs, and the absolute instability makes it untenable. Many of my family members bought and restored shitty in-bed campers as a safety net against eviction because it was constant and punishing.

This is advice for very high income, or already wealthy people.


I was certainly not wealthy or high income, as a student with no money, my parents not chipping in for rent, food, or university supplies, and keeping afloat with part time jobs.

But this was the mid-2000s, so things probably changed. Even with the exorbitant rent in Munich back then already, I wouldn't know with how it would work now with what the rents have become since.


Oh great! A shit coin to run infrastructure that doesn’t accept the shitcoin. Very sustainable.


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