The Big Brain am winning again! I am the greetest! Mwahahahaha!! Now I am leaving Earth for no raisin!
The Big Brain am winning again! I am the greetest! Mwahahahaha!! Now I am leaving Earth for no raisin!
Pinchy would have wanted it that way
Isn’t this the whole idea behind flatpak but everyone seems to hate it
…pondering intensifies
It’s complicated. It’s sort of colony animal, like a slime mold or a portuguese man-o-war. Either way, you shouldn’t touch it.
It’s your Beanniversary 🫘
MissingNo is evolving!
Thank you, mouthy American child. Please to take my hockey tree. 😂
Ah! Is it the hockey “tree” that has termites?
Hmm… Homer is hanging something up on Lisa’s wall because she is better at something than Bart…
The one where Lisa is moved up and Bart get held back a grade?
Edit: I feel like it might be a sports thing though. Lisa plays ice hockey?
A few things to note:
JavaScript is not a “batteries included” language - if you need math functions or cryptography or any kind of utility, you need to load it along with your script (usually from npm).
Loading a lot of small files is slower than streaming one big combined file, so tools like webpack will stitch all the files in your node_modules directory and minify it, so it’s not unusual to have big files like this.
Does the site actually need all this code? Probably not! The ridiculous part is that every one of those npm dependencies has it’s own list of dependencies, so just grabbing a small handful of libraries can result in huge trees of files!
Even more insane is that many of these probably have shared dependencies, but very slightly different versions, so multiple almost identical packages get downloaded.
Worst of all is that is most packages probably don’t use 90% of the code in the dependencies that they do need - e.g. if you want a “sin” function from a math library then you’ll be downloading “cos” and “tan” too.
There are tools like tree-shaking and pruning that help to remove unused packages during the bundler step, but I rarely see them used. It’s a lot of extra configuration and setup when mostly the products aren’t affected by a few extra KB or MB.
Anyway that’s why js and node and npm suck to both work with and to use. The site probably doesn’t need all that extra code, but there is no easy way to prove it so you get everything “just in case”.
I think it might be a riser or part of a sprue from a larger cast part
I assume just normal credit card payments online? PayPal started because people were scared to use their card online, but now you get all the same buyer protections and insurance.
4th panel should have been the baby reading C&H
I had to study the diagram a few times to figure out what the core point was, but I think it boils down to this:
Democracy: Highly equal, 1 person = 1 vote, everyone is included (“inalienist”)
Capitalism: Different levels of power, 1 person = $X, some people can’t participate as much as others (“alienist”)
Does this mean that Democratic Capitalism is somehow an oxymoron? Only in situations where we allow both types of power to coexist - hence the absolutely critical need to:
Did you just assume my species?
“cool”
Ah, so it’s not just software developers