Well, there are some rural staples like BBQ, and Mexican to a degree.
But, yes. The sort of ... enduring narrative is that rural areas and suburbs have chain restaurants, diners, and fast food, because immigrants go to cities and open restaurants from their native cuisine, and that suburbanites think black pepper is spicy and sushi is gross.
In actuality I think immigrants are increasingly (a) enamored of the American big-car / big-house lifestyle (makes sense, they choose to come here) and (b) bought-in to the notion that cities are dangerous, with bad schools. So immigrants rent a place in a strip mall near the suburban school district some other immigrant said was good online and start restaurants there. Google maps exists, suburbanites think nothing of a 25 minute drive, so they ask around online after the best examples of a particular ethnic cuisine, and they drive there.
In Maryland, where I live, it's certainly true that the highly-regarded Chinese and Korean dining is in suburbs. Latin Americans, specifically Guatemalans and Salvadorans, are the only immigrant group moving in to Baltimore (where I live) with any sort of enthusiasm.
A TV show comes out that is practically the Stargate program and instead of stopping its production, the Air Force lets it go on as a cover in case the Stargate program has a leak
You got further than I did. Visiting the site with Safari 16.6 results in "406 Your browser is not supported. Please upgrade your browser to continue."
Not what I'd expect from an informative page about a lightweight editor.
Alas, I live an a world where efficiency does actually matter, and elegance to me includes efficiency. I live in a world of embedded software, portability, and reliability. In this regard, almost every single functional language is an utter failure, because they require runtimes and big fat common libraries. Even golang is borderline. Haskell has little chance.
Generally I think this does answer the question about why functional languages don't dominate more than they do - although you could make an argument that JavaScript is a functional language, and it certainly is enjoying a lot of dominance these days. JS environments aren't known for being particularly efficient, though. To me, efficient use of resources is elegant, and a language needs to be able to do that.
You brought up something interesting. I believe academic computer science originated from at least three cultures: pure mathematics (Church, Turing, Kleene, Dijkstra), electrical engineering, and psychology (Licklieder). I say “at least” since there may be other cultures I’ve overlooked. These three cultures have different views on programming: the EE-based culture emphasizes taking full advantage of the underlying hardware, the math-based culture emphasizes proof, and the psychology-based culture emphasizes human factors.
The challenge is reconciling these three views of programming: the holy grail is a programming language that is ergonomic and expressive, yet is also amenable to mathematical reasoning and can be implemented efficiently. I wonder if there is a programming language theory version of the CAP theory in distributed systems, where one compares performance, ease of mathematical reasoning about code, and human factors?
Most doctor's offices just use my name and birthday to assume authorization to transfer sensitive medical information. I kinda feel like privacy is massive "emperor has no clothes" aspect of society.
This behaviour is just because their IT system doesn’t allow regular users to search for names, just for birth dates. Then they pick you by name from a list of people with that birthday.
This is nowhere near the only use of the "birthday + name == all info" hack in the US medical industry. It's basically one big giant frat club with shakes and implicit trust all around. Except that it doesn't actually work; you can fake being a doctor to just about any US medical office and get nearly any American's private medical data.
Exactly. This is just snake oil. No idea why I'm getting downvoted for stating the truth: the employee doesn't care about privacy. They don't use the birthdate because they think it's more secure, the ask for it because they have to.
So what? The person on the counter doesn't care at all about your privacy. They just cannot type your name into a search box, they have to ask for your birth date first before they can select you from a list based on the name that you state afterwards. At least that's the case at many doctor's offices I've been to.
What do you mean so what? How does asking for a name help if it comes back with a list of multiple people with the same name? Adding the birthday makes it (much closer to) unique
reply