People have different work preferences; some thrive working from home, while others do better in the office. I think the strong opinions about mandated office days stem from the fact that the job doesn’t necessarily require employees to be physically present.
While jobs maybe not require someone been physically present. So far over the last 2 years seeing multiple businesses do return to office, productivity sky rocketed. Sure a few people who didn’t want to return to the office left, but turns out they weren’t that productive. People are easy to replace now.
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There's a common misconception that fresh pasta is always better over store bought.
In fact, there are two different kinds of pasta here fresh (egg based) and dried (semolina based) pasta.
Egg pasta can easily be made at home, without even the need for any machines.
Dried pasta requires industrial heavy duty machinery due to the force required to shape the pasta.
It's also important to note that not all sauces pair well with fresh pasta and same goes for dried.
Nowadays I'm careful when picking dried pasta from the supermarket. I have learnt that the more yellow the colour, and the smoother the texture, the lower the overall quality will be of the pasta.
Looking for these key indicators will give you pasta with better texture and pasta water to use for your sauces.
It would depend on where most of the processing is happening.
PostGIS gives you the benefit of spatial indexes which are extremely performant.
I've seen Python GeoSpatial applications taking hours to finish processing which only took a few minutes when shifted onto PostGIS.
If you're also doing a lot of processing in Python, exploring other languages could also help. In the case of Julia you get a typed language that's also JIT compiled.
I think that the challenge for most is that the PostGIS query planner does the indexing for you in most queries, while a naive all-pairs comparison in geopandas/shapely won't tell you to use the .sindex attribute instead.
I got the same result: all pages after the Foreword at page 4 and except a couple towards the end are blank. I tried printing to PDF, then the Save to PDF function of the FoxyTab Firefox extension; I also tried to save it a a single file using the SingleFileZ extension that saves pages and data using a compressed single file (thus no conversion to PDF) which is directly readable by Firefox. No way, always blank pages after the Foreword.
Not sure if that's a protection scheme or a bad conversion from pdf, but to me being forced to be online and use a browser to read a book kills any interest.
Repo Link: https://github.com/eborin/riscv-programming
I may be wrong. I am not able to see the content of the book. (I thought, above repo has the content.). More ever, I see copyright notice in the book. So,
it is open for reading purpose only.
Seems, reading the book on the browser is the only option, that is how I did it since many weeks.