Virtual credit card numbers are a great way to combat this.
For example, the Wall Street journal pricing is pretty wild (8 dollars a month for the first 3 months then jumps to much higher) so I use a virtual card which expires right before the planned price hike.
For other services I like to either use a virtual card with a single transaction limit, or just buy the service and cancel right away which typically is equivalent to just paying for a month
I tried to cancel a virtual card to cancel a service (that only allowed me to change anything by phone call, so this would have been far more convenient and less confrontational) and they tallied up a "delinquent balance" and threatened to sue if I didn't pay everything I owed in order to cancel.
Canceling the card does not work for predatory companies. Maybe for well-meaning ones that automatically cancel when a charge declines.
I switched home insurance away from liberty mutual after my term was up and did not renew. Three weeks after my coverage with them lapsed I received a notice from a collection agency for a late fee for coverage I never purchased. FUCK automatic billing and non-consensual subscriptions.
Agreed! I'm a long time privacy.com customer. It completely flips the script on subscriptions. I'll create a new card with only a budget for 1 month of the subscription. If I actually care about it I'll see the 2nd month's charge fail and quickly fix it. Also great for making sure free trials don't become forever subscriptions.
That's actually a great tip. Unfortunately I can't set them to expire at will, but using a 24 hours one (the usually available option here) is enough to get one month subscription without worries about the price hike.
My go-tos for outdoor climbing were La Sportiva Mythos, which never got too stinky because (I think) they were unlined leather so retained less moisture & funk. However, the laces made them less attractive for the shorter routes in the gym, so I branched out.
I just looked at the LS site, and it's been so long I recognize nothing aside from the current iteration of the Mythos. The biohazard shoes I had were from someone else, maybe 5.10? Maybe they were UFOs?
Nothing in 5.10's lineup looks familiar to me, but apparently they were acquired by Adidas in 2011, which probably explains it.
My stanky shoes were all black with some grey accents, and closed with velcro, which made them ideal for the gym. I wore them outside exactly ONCE, to a place near Austin. They were fine until I got above the trees, and the sun started BAKING MY FEET. They got super super hot in the sun, which was very uncomfortable and relegated them to gym-only climbing thereafter.
All of the velcro katanas I've ever owned ultimately ended up pretty stank. I think its the textile lining. Meanwhile, my Muira VCS have stayed pretty clean. My Muira Lace, not so much.
yeah, I wouldn't recommend trying to do this with pure Java but you could pass around method handles for that purpose.
You certainly would want to use an `interface` and that means you need an object. It could be an object that has no fields though and receives all data through its methods.
But it does go against the spirit of objects: You want to make use of `this` because you are in the land of nouns.
I got mine for health reasons (low back, must work lying down sometimes), and while for me it’s a really useful tool, I couldn’t see working in it full time. It’s just too bulky, leaves a dumb red mark on my face, has bugs where sometimes it doesn’t connect, and is pretty much always dead unless it’s actively plugged in (doesn’t idle well).
Some of those things can be improved but inherently strapping a computer to your face is just not a great experience.
I definetly get use out of mine - I’d say 5 hour a week is a sweet spot - and it’s cool working in novel places like a garden or by a river, but full time doesn’t seem feasible
As an opposite view point I work on a 10 year old legacy iOS app which has almost no abstractions and it’s a huge mess. Most classes are many thousands of lines long and mix every concern together.
We are fixing it up by refactoring - many through adding abstractions.
I’m sure code with bad abstractions can scale poorly, but I’m not clear how code without abstractions can scale at all.
Abstraction is a an abstract word, but as an example, I would consider the process of refactoring a big piece of code which mixed together api requests and view presentation into a 2 classes (a presenter, and an api client) as adding abstraction, especially if those new components are defined by interfaces.
And I’d rather work in a codebase where the owners are constantly doing such refactors than not.
edit: if you feel the need to downvote, feel free to share why you think my question is problematic - I think that "poorly written" to describe excessive code file sizes is such a wooly phrase as to be basically useless in a discussion like this, and when examined more closely usually comes down to "poorly abstracted". But I stand to be corrected.
America is a land of inequality. There are many people (poor) which have bad healthcare, but for many others (the wealthy, stably employed), healthcare is excellent.
If you have a good job with a good PPO plan, this healthcare is just incredible. You are free to see any doctor you want, including specialists without any gatekeeping.
Want to see the best orthopedic surgeon in the world who just fixed Lebron James's knee? Make a call and get an appointment within a few weeks paying a 30 dollar fee. Want to see 10 more orthopedic surgeons to get 2nd, 3rd and 4th opinions? Same process.
Decide to have a surgery? Sure! Sign up to have that done in a few weeks, eventually paying $250 out of pocket for the whole experience, including overnight hospital stays and physical therapy.
Having spent some good time hanging out in facebook groups for my condition with international patients, its pretty much always evident that they dont have this kind of freedom in picking their doctor, getting a surgery quickly, and also often lack cutting edge and modern treatments that are offered in the states.
I totally understand that this system is very unfair, and there is whole subset of people that have no access to care, but it should be noted that if you are in the top 50% of society financially, and especially if you have a difficult health condition you manage there is no healthcare system better in the world to do that then the USA.
I'm pretty sure it can't be the top 50% of society that has this, because that would mean it was average or even median. I expect it can probably start to happen from the top 25% up
FAANG jobs absolutely hire engineers over zoom. It’s not just one interview, but the whole process is done remotely over video. It typically includes somewhere between 5 to 10 sessions covering coding, architecture and behavioral.
Source - work at a FANG which engineers exclusively via remote video call.
I haven't worked FAANG, but a Fortune 100 tech company who's been hiring a ton of ex-Amazon management. Interviews 100% remote, even though there's an office in Chicago. No option.
A standardized test is considerably more standardized than a leetcode interview though. Not to mention you take it once and then provide the scores to everyone. My process with taking the cpa exam a single time was a much better experience than random leetcode problems every time.
Thin boned and uncoordinated? Rock climbing is your sport! Go to a local gym and try it for a few months and you might find yourself getting really good really fast
For example, the Wall Street journal pricing is pretty wild (8 dollars a month for the first 3 months then jumps to much higher) so I use a virtual card which expires right before the planned price hike.
For other services I like to either use a virtual card with a single transaction limit, or just buy the service and cancel right away which typically is equivalent to just paying for a month