The barriers may keep out low effort submissions*, but they also keep out contributors whose time is too valuable to waste on installing and configuring a bespoke setup based on some possibly outdated wiki.
* contributors need to start somewhere, so even broken PRs can lead to having a valuable contributor if you're able to guide them.
My non-techie relatives can't tell the difference between the local device password/passphrase and the iCloud/Apple ID password, so they'll enter them all until something works (I don't blame them, the UIs for these are unclear and inconsistent).
Apple used to make fun of Vista's UAC, but they've ended up with the same patchwork of sudden prompts, and even weaker UI.
Yeah, to be perfectly honest, I understand. I think TCC is meant to be the primary consent system, but there are others (such as the Authorization system, and the Service Management framework).
"Psychologist" is not a protected title and anyone can use it. "Clinical psychologist" is a protected title, and one that requires an extremely high level of training and very strict professional standards. I imagine that the overwhelming majority of the population are completely oblivious to this distinction.
The BACP's standards really aren't very high, as you can qualify for membership after a one-year part-time course and a few weeks of work experience. Their disciplinary procedures are, in my opinion, almost entirely ineffectual. They undertake no meaningful monitoring of accredited members, relying solely on complaints from members of the public. Out of tens of thousands of registered members, only a single-digit number are subject to disciplinary action every year. The findings of the few disciplinary hearings they do actually conduct suggest to me that they are perfectly happy to allow lazy, feckless and incompetent practitioners to remain on their register, with only a perfunctory slap on the wrist.
BACP membership is of course entirely voluntary and in no way necessary in order to practice as a counsellor or psychotherapist.
Rust generates absurd amounts of debug info, so the default debug builds are much much larger.
Zero-cost abstractions don't have zero-cost debug info. In fact, all of the optimized-away stuff is intentionally preserved with full fidelity in the debug info.
I am for sure not educated about the difference between CCS and CCS2 but it does say it's not just CHAdeMO https://openinverter.org/wiki/ZombieVerter_VCU#:~:text=ccs%2... and further down they cite a BMW i3 which I had and it fast charged to my satisfaction
But realistically, you only need to know the lower bound for the page size, so pages larger by an unknown multiple are not a problem. Or use masked loads, and don't even worry about pages.
This doesn't mean anything. He won't get enough likes on Xitter tomorrow and will flip-flop to 1000% tariffs or whatever else comes to his senile mind.
This unstable circus of a government can't be trusted.
There's plenty of ways to ensure that. Don't let Apple's bad UI fool you into accepting Apple's bad business practices.
Apple could have created an API for other payment providers to integrate with, so that you could sign up for IAP with whoever you want (imagine your IAP and subscriptions run by PayPal if you enter a PayPal account instead of a credit card).
Banks and payment processors already have tons of policies requiring payments to be presented in a clear way, refunds and cancellations processed properly, etc. There are also plenty of trademark and consumer protection laws that forbid misrepresentation. It's a solved problem that Apple pretends to be unsolvable and spreads FUD about to keep their cash cow.
* contributors need to start somewhere, so even broken PRs can lead to having a valuable contributor if you're able to guide them.