How would I know without looking at the app binary?
How would I know without looking at the app binary?
Well, to be fair, modern lamplighters in London are not low skilled employees, they’re highly skilled and well paid engineers. So it did work out quite well for them
That’s not due to kotlin.
Every decent piece of software has crap loads of resources: icons, texts, translations, manuals, sounds, fonts, etc. Even hello world app contains at least one resource - “hello world” string and what’s funny is that executable meta data required by operating systems and the string take more space than the actual code to print this string.
Most resources are not consumed by wonky code or dependencies. Most resources are consumed by images and sounds.
Kotlin doesn’t have much impact on binary size.
That moment when MS Paint is more advanced than GIMP, lol.
GIMP… GIMP never changes…
If you can SSH into a remote host, you can git push to it directly from your laptop.
WinSCP is a much better client. Also use WSL2 instead of VM.
I mean this modest 3 bed house https://www.zoopla.co.uk/for-sale/details/69124927 is £1m over Bugatti Tourbillion. I have no clue what you’re planning to buy for a used Bugatti price… A shack?
I’ve explained it in another reply. It’s not about being “stationary”.
There are two ways of looking at it.
No matter how you twist it you’ll end up all alone in space. You need a machine which can move through both time and space at the same time.
What you’re describing is a machine which moves both in time and space. A machine which only moves in time would result in this meme no matter how you twist it.
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That’s rich coming out of you!
Scientists do studies on bread since the 19th century. There are bread institutes in many countries like Germany in Russia. Not sure why it is in that list.