Those are the ones that were high profile enough to warrant a Wikipedia page, it's not exhaustive. Here's a more comprehensive database: https://policecrime.bgsu.edu/
You're still citing arrested, not charged and convicted though. Those are all different, with no guarantee of the officers facing repercussions beyond a brief arrest. While those are still consequences, they have to be consistently applied (which they don't seem to be for police officers in America) or have consequences for consistently poorly behaved officers
Although you're probably less inclined to try to escape your country in a hot air balloon if food is so easily and cheaply available that it's made you overweight.
Do you have any strong evidence that this would improve the situation? It may be correlative and not causative, but as working from home is increasing, it seems that most related statistics to loneliness are increasing as well. What if it's actually part of the problem and not the solution?
I'm not saying that I have evidence on hand to the contrary, just trying to challenge the idea.
At least in my area, WFH is going away and RTO is increasing. More and more of my friends can not meet up for lunch breaks for example.
It seems counterintuitive to restrict where people can be, and expect them to meet new people. I don't want to use my office to socialize, I prefer to make friends that I share interests with.
I see some people in this thread have had success with coworking spaces, that sounds better than an office, at least.
Anecdotally, I've had a lot of people in my life recede after getting pets. They're an excellent excuse to say no to things that you might otherwise do, because you need to get home and take care of the pet or you can't find a sitter to go on a trip etc.
Not generalizing to all people, but I think for some a pet can reinforce anti-social tendencies.
Dogs are a bit like having kids, if you embrace it. They make it tougher to do extended trips (e.g. foreign countries), but you can develop an entire social network through them. Doing dog-related trips is a new world of opportunities. I did a three night stay across the state with a bunch of my dog park friends a few years ago. Hikes with the dogs during the day, beer and board games every evening.
Getting rid of cruft isn't really a goal in and of itself, it's a goal in service of other goals. If it's not about performance, what else would be accomplished?
A simplified API means higher programmer productivity, higher robustness, simplified debugging and testing, and also less internal complexity in the driver. All this together may also result in slightly higher performance, but it's not the main goal. You might gain a couple hundred microseconds per frame as a side effect of the simpler code, but if your use case already perfectly fits the 'modern subset' of Vulkan or D3D12, the performance gains will be deep in 'diminishing returns area' and hardly noticeable in the frame rate. It's mostly about secondary effects by making the programmer's life easier on both sides of the API.
The cost/compromise is dropping support for outdated GPUs.
Getting rid of cruft and simplifying the GPU access, makes it easier to develope software that uses GPU's, like AI's, games ..etc.
Have you taken a look at the codebase of some game-engines, its complete cluster fk, cause some simple tasks just take 800 lines of code, and in the end the drivers don't even use the complexity graphics API's force upon you.
Carriage is not a new name, the author plainly states that it's an existing industry term. And I think the closing paragraph where the author posits that Netflix could switch to an open marketplace model is a novel suggestion, if highly unlikely. Not sure where all this negativity comes from.
I feel like calling this a downside implies there's an alternative, but there's no way that `innerHtml`'s behavior could be changed. There are a lot of valid reasons for arbitrary HTML to be set, and changing that would break so many things.
There could be a better name for it? like `innerSanitizedHTML` or something, that makes it clear what the difference between the two calls are. There is nothing in the wording of setHTML that makes it clear it sanitizes where innerHTML doesn't.
reply