Yes, I'm working on FAA SWIM services now.
The tech feels old school (UML, XSD...) but having documentation, class generation from XSD is very helpful.
What is worse between writing potentially vulnerable code yourself and having too many dependencies.
Finding vulnerabilities and writing exploits is costly, and hackers will most likely target popular libraries over your particular software, much higher impact, and it pays better. Dependencies also tend to do more than you need, increasing the attack surface.
So your C code may be worse in theory, but it is a smaller, thus harder to hit target. It is probably an advantage against undiscriminating attacks like bots and a downside against targeted attacks by motivated groups.
I'd also add for the defense of white themes that with OLED panels showing up everywhere (where dark pixels are effectively shut off), that a dark BG with light FG/text has quite a bit of a "halo" effect on the letters and this fuzziness wreaks havock on my eyesight/fatigue.
All doctors (including concierge) use 3rd party services for practically everything from blood work to imaging to application products. It’s safe to say that it’s very likely that they’ll outsource the genetic testing to a 3rd party
That's the best advice. I have seen some genetic test results. They are not simple to interpret and it is not easy to know what to test for- every person has natural defects and mutations which not always translates to real diseases.
I don't know your background, but I would advise focusing on niche job pool (legacy cobol systems, ERP development, defense/safety in Ada projects ...).
reply