This week we visit the LinkedIn alternate universe, hug a face, offend a programmer, explain NFTs, blame an intern, and decode a message in a parachute.
This week we let lawyers do user research, we hire a VP of โnot nowโ, we learn some presidential history, and sit down to read a book.
This week we flip the script on dns, meet to discuss productivity, smell the antitrust storm, and slice with tomatoes.
This week in the art of the rollup, we find out that masks work (shocker!), the earth is not flat, a new kind of bacon, and how to say โyโall sound crazyโ
This week we watch the GameStop Show, dig into the history of lower case letters, drop into Clubhouse, and dig some Cookie Monster rocks.
This week we accidentally continue our subscription, reveal a fad, witness real patience, lolz a short-seller, repel mosquitos, and play for the win.
This week we discover new genders, design our own retro computer, trust but donโt verify, explore the sea shanty, and ride our bikes around town.
This week we watch a coup, Big Tech goes 180 on content moderation, we release the Roombas, and observer the perfectly rectangular month.
This is erroneous because Continuous Integration by definition means frequent merges into mainline. The whole point is to keep multiple developers in sync. https://t.co/GqmZt77GCT pic.twitter.com/uLS9a41Srv โ Martin Fowler (@martinfowler) January 4, 2021 If continuous integration is โdevelopers push their work into the mainlineโ, then Iโ