

Same! This is really surprising based on the other stuff I’ve read.
Same! This is really surprising based on the other stuff I’ve read.
Both can be discussed. In fact many levels of this can be discussed, from the effect on individuals and families involved in the crash, the effect on the owners of the buildings, the effect on the airport, the city, the airline, the country.
Just because they’re talking about the effects of a disaster like this on Air India, it doesn’t take away from what happened to the individuals. It shows the massive reverberations of an event like this.
The airline still has individuals working for it whose livelihood is potentially affected. There are people making the planes that the airline is purchasing. It’s people who live in India who are in mourning over the individuals who died but also shocked at the impact to a symbol of national pride.
If you’re not ready to think about the people beyond those directly affected, that’s fine. (I’m not being facetious. Everyone processes things in a different way. It’s really okay.) But a story like this is inevitably going to be bigger than those individuals and people will talk about different aspects of it. If it wasn’t that big, we probably wouldn’t be hearing or talking about it at all at this point.
Intentional misspelling of Epstein for plausible deniability?
TLDR: 3.11 is twice as fast as 3.10 at doing global name lookups, so an old speedup hack of aliasing a global function locally isn’t needed.
For example, when calling len() in a loop, going l=len, and calling l() in the loop was faster in 3.10. In 3.11, moreso in 3.13, it’s almost a wash.
However, the author says this:
Accessing functions through a module [e.g. math.sin()] or a deep attribute chain can still carry overhead. Creating a local alias or using “from module import name” continues to be effective in those situations.
But when I look at the numbers, I would say 3.13 is pretty close to making it an unnecessary optimization in general. A little subjective on how you interpret the numbers.
Great info, but this was like trying to use a recipe and reading the author’s life story to get there.
The highest estimate of people killed in the conflict (both sides) that I can find is around 100. This whole article seems like made up slop.
When I looked into this newspaper I found some comments (on Reddit :-/) saying it is a fake news rag published by a right-wing nationalist group in Thailand.