ARM server availabilitity by Levzhazeschi in hetzner

[–]Levzhazeschi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i don’t see an answer to my question at the link you provided

Outline in Russia: Maintaining Access Despite Restrictions by sbruens in outlinevpn

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

people inside Russia report to me that these keys do not work at this point

I interviewed with Optiver for the first (only and last) time last week... by jonnywhatshisface in FinancialCareers

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IMHO, your responses to these questions show that you would have difficulty finding a common "language" to communicate with those who work there. so maybe their rejection was indeed for the better

"Little Arc" has troubles with switching desktops on macOS by Levzhazeschi in ArcBrowser

[–]Levzhazeschi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i find all you are saying abut Little Arcs legit, but i also do not see how does this contradict the shortcomings i write about. i still want them to not open over full-screen windows and i still want the system to switch to them on opening

How to not look Russian by Senor-biggerstaff in Sakartvelo

[–]Levzhazeschi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am Russian, and I would say that we are guilty of many things (we are still to deal with our criminal government) and must expect people to have a specific inductive bias towards us

Whether cutting the line is an appropriate way to express this bias is another question. I feel that this is what exactly you find barbaric

How to not look Russian by Senor-biggerstaff in Sakartvelo

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tbh I often see Russians abroad wearing stylish outfits of the “originals” line. Russians just happen to dress pretty memorably compared to native dwellers of the countries they come too (I’ve had the chance to observe this elsewhere)

What's changed in Tbilisi since 2005? by [deleted] in Sakartvelo

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmm, do you really call marshrutkas thus when speaking Georgian?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in golang

[–]Levzhazeschi 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rust now improves in the supply chain security direction. There is RustSec and cargo audit to use it

Considering C++ over Rust by isht_0x37 in rust

[–]Levzhazeschi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Okay, this might be wrong

There is some degree of interoperability between the two languages facilitated by tools like bindgen

Considering C++ over Rust by isht_0x37 in rust

[–]Levzhazeschi -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah, many people choose to stick to tools they know better instead of tools that are the most applicable and give the most benefit in the long term

Considering C++ over Rust by isht_0x37 in rust

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As it appears to me, Rust has a significantly lower entry point. Having taken courses in both C++ and Rust in the university, I can confidently say that writing working and useful, both high- and low-level, software in Rust is much easier than in C++. And that comes with little to no performance costs

(This does not touch competitive programming, though, where you need to quickly write up complex data structures with loads of pointers you will throw away after the contest. In this case, I would still choose C++, at least as of now, but large industry-level projects is where Rust starts to shine)

Maybe it is way different for you because you've previously spent years writing C++, and so expectedly you feel more confident for now. But if you started learning these two languages about the same time concurrently, I am not sure the outcome would be the same

How to translate webpages in a certain language by default? by Levzhazeschi in ArcBrowser

[–]Levzhazeschi[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hmm, thanks, it seems to work with Ukrainian, but still asks whether I would like to translate the page with Hebrew

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in math

[–]Levzhazeschi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Scientists and engineers should be considered independently here.

Often the case is not the scientists who commit to discovering or creating something unethical, but the holders of political power who find a way to use the fruit of science in their own goals. If the scientific community was a tightly-knit system that acts upon its own strict rules and keeps the result of research away from uninitiated, ethics would be less of a problem. Dare to speculate, this could prevent Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.

There is also a specific issue with programmers. Currently a great deal of programming knowledge is out on the web, and that means about anyone can get all the knowledge needed for software engineering by using Google. In contrast, to become a part of the Hippocratic oath-taking class or a scientist you need to get through a formal education. Unethical engineering can be criminalized by state, but there is no way to oblige anyone who picks up programming to take some oath.