You'd hope there is room for a lot of stuff in between as well. I tried searching for some of yhe more unknown artists I follow (and have bought stuff from!) but didn't see any clear way to filter it to Spotify/music metadata only. Restricting to metadata+other cuts it down somewhat but it's still 100s of results for most topics.
Will be interesting to see what's there and not once the actual music torrents come up, should make it easier to search.
What is the evidence that these are drug traffickers? Are they convicted anywhere? Should the police in the US be able to execute anyone they claim are trafficking drugs or committing other crimes?
Indiscriminate would be nuclear weapons on cities. This mission’s ultimate goal was to prevent NK doing that.
If you could stop NK doing that, would you pull the trigger? Would you make a targeted kill of a person who compromised that mission by discovering it?
> We obviously have smaller pre-merge tests as well.
This. I feel like trying to segregate tests into "unit" and "integration" tests (among other kinds) did a lot of damage in terms of prevalent testing setups.
Tests are either fast or slow. Fast ones should be run as often as possible, with really fast ones every few keystrokes (or on file save in the IDE/editor), normal fast ones on commit, and slow ones once a day (or however often you can afford, etc.). All these kinds of tests have value, so going without covering both fast and slow cases is risky. However, there's no need for the slow tests to interrupt day-to-day development.
I seem to remember seeing something like `<slowTest>` pragma in GToolkit test suites, so at least a few people seem to have had the same idea. The majority, however, remains fixated on unit/integration categorization and end up with (a select few) unit tests taking "1-2 orders of magnitude" too long, which actually diminishes the value of those tests since now they're run less often.
Pssht, so little? With AI you're supposed to have a huge data center and pay them thousands of dollars to process many, many tokens. That way you are doing it right, 24/7.
If you see these or other pictures of starving children, you are looking at images of children intentionally being starved by Israel, and you should reconsider what you think of their methods and intentions.
In Sweden at leasts, balaclavas and other wearables "preventing identification" is specifically illegal _at_ protests. From what I remember the danish case is similar.