Holy crap. TIL https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amal_Clooney
… and two hours before me.
Your pronunciation was correct before the 1980s. Then, the scientific community collectively had enough of the snickering.
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It’s designed to run on meatbags, not tracks. The tracks are there just to make the meatbags uncomfortable until the trolley arrives.
Kids was fucked.
I use Thunderbird on a Debian desktop and a client on my phone Fairmail https://email.faircode.eu/
I’ve never had that flavor, just orange and red. Did it make you forget your sorrows on the way to the afterlife?
Ah, yes. Easily adoptable by coworkers + low repeatability = no need to change. Stick with spreadsheets.
Tale as old as time. I’ll just leave this here: https://genius.com/Tool-hooker-with-a-penis-lyrics
I agree that spreadsheet use in engineering is one of the most complicated use cases, but I submit for your consideration another very complicated use case: laboratory software ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_information_management_system ) LIMS do what Excel can but with the added benefits of being more controlled, secure, user friendly and faster because they’re built upon the back of a modern database. In my experience with engineer built worksheets, the engineer that built them is typically the only one who knows how to use them. This is job security for that engineer, but isn’t scaleable for others’ use. In the lab software, a scientist builds the methods, and lab technicians use those methods over and over again daily. Each step of each use of the method is recorded with the inputs, the results, who performed it and exactly when. The workflows are built-in and the calculations are comparable to those used in engineering.
If an Excel sheet is that big, it should be replaced with a proper database, which most likely would run on Linux. I think you’re right, though, about the lack of planning around the practicalities.
Exactly correct. DePaola is probably not human.
Thanks for real
Oooooooh, thanks.
What does the circle indicate?
It’s 2023. We call it Accenturing now.
WHERE the_data_matches_the_vaguely_defined_parameters_in_your_head_that_you_never_told_me