As a CS student and IT intern, these are desktop software I use the most:
As a CS student and IT intern, these are desktop software I use the most:
No. More like do exactly what the designers recommend during the break-in period.
That’s precisely it. He wouldn’t apply this set of strategies to men, he’s insisting that the status quo is just fine and women just aren’t trying hard enough, instead of advocating change through the industry.
Best of all, he doesn’t apply this set of strategies to men. Just the wimmenz. Again, men are the default standard that women are expected to match, or be ignored.
So his entire article translates to men are stupid chauvinists who won’t hire women if they can help it so the best thing for women to do is erase and obscure your gender so that the menfolk will give you equal consideration? Also diversity but not really?
I have only one request for a car “for ladies”-- a place to put my fucking purse that’s not the passengers seat! How hard is that?
even amidst my staggering flummoxation, i have to admit, that color is gorgeous.
For Android, you can use SwiftKey and enable emoji prediction. I will admit that I’m on beta and I’m not sure if it’s available in stable. I checked the feature list, in the Play Store, and couldn’t tell.
Agreed, but there’s a difference between a one star review for “My drink took 10 minutes” and one star review for “I’m out $1000 and this contractor did a shit job I have to pay even more money to fix.” One is overkill, the other is probably not.
Trying to make bad relationships work.
I started with Dashlane and still think it's pretty good... the interface is great, they always seen to be working on improving their stuff (like with the recent automatic password change), and their software is pretty much everywhere.
Dear Lifehacker,
I'm ready to take the plunge and build my own home server, but I'm not sure which route I should…
We don't hate it unless it's spam/irrelevant/trying to push a product. In this case, I'd say totally relevant!
I'd suggest sublimetext2 as a text editor for coding. I used Kate until I found it, and now Kate just seems ancient. sublimetext has an incredible set of features, and is ridiculously fast. It's not free ($80), but there's a free preview version that you can keep using as long as you like (with the occasional notice…
Android (4.0+): Great podcasts (including ours!) are out there, but finding new ones to try can be tricky. That's…