Government jobs love them though, Security+ is required for a lot of DoD jobs.
Government jobs love them though, Security+ is required for a lot of DoD jobs.
If it’s repeated offenses like the example in the article, it’s a little harder to prove it wasn’t intentional.
The apps using GPT4 without regards to safety can be though. Example: replacing human with chatbot for suicide prevention.
They are laying off people not on strike in response to the strike and blaming those on strike for it.
You are probably correct. I don’t know if it’s true, it’s probably more likely it was a way for it not to fail.
I said HTTP mainly because HTML is plaintext because of it. 1.0s main purpose was to manipulate the page. Of course Array objects weren’t added til 1.1, when netscape navigator 3.0 released, but it was still mostly 1.0 code. I felt like having everything be coercable to string made it easy for you to just assign it to the document. If you assigned the wrong thing it wouldn’t crash.
I originally thought there was a precursor to microsofts XMLHTTP in an earlier version due to the 1997 ECMAScript documentation specifically talking about using it both client and serverside to distribute computations, but it was far more static. So, I’m probably just wrong.
Mainly because JavaScript was designed to work along side HTTP in a browser. Most of its input will be text, so defaulting common behavior to strings makes some sense.
Neither was Ted Cruz, but he still ran in the primary.
Array.prototype.sort
if no callback is passed to it will coerce non-undefined
elements to strings when sorting. It does do that.
To sort numbers passing a function like (a, b) => a - b
is good enough.
If it’s a maximum limit to what’s safe, you can say anything at or below it is safe. They don’t set the maximum at a value that is unsafe for some vehicles.