I’m now wondering if they have confused loitering (an ill defined concept, particularly to kill over) with looting
I’m now wondering if they have confused loitering (an ill defined concept, particularly to kill over) with looting
Ah today’s bothsidesism
Lol. I thought the Falkland Islands looked a lot like Madagascar I just somehow never looked at the rest of the map.
I feel like I saw this hallway on McMansion Hell
Bringing new meaning to the phrase “assume cows are spherical”
It’s probably confusing people already who never rented VHS tapes
Honestly it got pretty visible during the height of the covid pandemic: https://apnews.com/article/coronavirus-pandemic-health-68c9762a4420094d300f9cbada0186f8
Not sure how much worse you could make it.
Not a JS dev either but ===
.
Not really sure what the (+x)
is about
The feds are actually disturbingly fair about this. You can deduct your legal fees as a business expense.
While embezzlers, thieves, and the like are forced to report their illegally acquired income for tax purposes, they may also take deductions for costs relating to criminal activity. For example, in Commissioner v. Tellier, a taxpayer was found guilty of engaging in business activities that violated the Securities Act of 1933.[8] The taxpayer subsequently deducted the legal fees he spent while defending himself.[8] The U.S. Supreme Court held that the taxpayer was allowed to deduct the legal fees from his gross income because they meet the requirements of §162(a),[9] which allows the taxpayer to deduct all the “ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on a trade or business.”[10] The Court reasoned (and the Internal Revenue Service did not contest the point) that it was ordinary and necessary for a person engaged in a business to expect to have legal fees associated with that business, even though such things may only happen once in a lifetime.[9] Therefore, the taxpayer in Tellier was allowed to deduct his legal fees from his gross income, even though he incurred the fees because of his crime. The U.S. Supreme Court in Tellier reiterated that the purpose of the tax code was to tax net income, not punish unlawful behavior.[11] The Court suggested that if this was not the case, Congress would change the tax code to include special tax rules for illegal conduct
Oh look the gold bugs are back
What exactly is it raining at 56°C?
I’m scared what your weather is like
It’s slightly colder right now in the SF Bay Area where it doesn’t snow
It’s always disconcerting when I go somewhere it’s supposed to snow in the winter and it’s warmer.
Voice assistants are money losing products. If they can do something like processing the wakewords on the device before chosing to send to a server they will. These companies are far too stingy to continuously stream audio to their servers
Those are Mayan numerals for those curious
Apple wrote bugged TLS code that broke using unbraced ifs with a goto, hence the name “goto fail”. You don’t need a goto to break this code though. All you need is a second indented line under the if
#2 is also the most insideous to update. Add another indented line to one of the conditions and the cotrol flow completely breaks while visually appearing fine.
C and a number of other languages have annoying pair of parallel syntax systems that makes it easy for people to read code one way and computers to compile it another. People read the indentation and newlines while compilers count braces and semicolons. #2 gets rid of the braces and makes control flow driven by semicolons making human visual inspection more likely to fail
Please don’t use #2. It is how you get the goto fail bug
As someone who has had to put together websites:
Nope I am not going to stop using this or AVIF (which does better)
The article doesn’t count the popups you get when you try to change your default browser
I’m a little concerned killing the main breaker might result in a sudden temperature change that might fracture the gas line. Of course if you turn the gas off you might get fried.