Oh are we sharing accidentally embarrassing Google searches now?
There was a time I was asked to work with a C code base that was last touched three years ago. Now, C in any standard isn't even my forte. It was doing some string manipulation whose behavior I can't exactly understand. Thinking I need a basics refresher, I Googled "c strings".
Woops. Got to be among my quickest tab closes. Cue look around if anyone happened to be looking at my monitor too.
(I will save people the mystery and possible blushes: apparently there's a type of lingerie called a "C string", in the same fashion as a "G string". The more you know.)
I was ranked favorably in a job application once because I had used LaTeX to produce my CV, and had also listed `\LaTeX` (rendered nicely) under publishing & communication skills. You never know what's going to pique the hiring manager's interest. Turns out it gave him a bout of nostalgia for his days at university studying mathematics.
I'm still perplexed that Apple doesn't offer over the air updates, especially for security updates. 137 MB shouldn't be that big a deal on a normal 4G connection.
>137 MB shouldn't be that big a deal on a normal 4G connection.
"I can download a 137MB file when I want over a 4G connection when I want" does not equal "The entire 4G network can handle the high coincident demand of all iPhone users downloading 137MBs simultaneously"
That would be absolute madness. Can you imaging Apple pushing a 137MB file to all active iOS devices over cellular? I'm sure the carriers would appreciate :)
Agreed, this is super annoying. You can install dozens of 99MB apps over 4G every day but nooo you can't have your broadpwn fix on the move. Except if you happen to have two devices with 4G, then you can wifi-hotspot-tether one to the other and vice versa for the update just fine.
But that should be up to the users to decide. I'll be much happier to use up 137 MB for a critical security update than 354 MB for the latest Facebook app update (version 132.0).
Hmm, interesting. Updates, and especially security updates, can be seen as a common good. It's the only kind of thing I can think of that exemptions from data caps might be a good idea for.
I wish there were a cellular broadcast mechanism for data like this. Sending out OS updates, cache prefill, etc. to everyone on a cell network during low use periods would be interesting.
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