We have these on bike lanes at intersections in the Netherlands.
In addition to everything already discussed here, they also have the role of asking for a green light automatically for you. If there are no cars travelling on Street ways contending with the bike lane, the light turns green. Alternatively, it turns green when you get your turn.
You can also ask for the green light by pushing a button, but it’s nice that some intersections (the newer ones) don’t require it.
However, I’m not sure if these can be configured to work for both cars and bikes at the same time.
This is the state of the modern internet — ultra-profitable platforms outright abdicating any responsibility toward the customer, offering not a “service” or a “portal,” but cramming as many ways to interrupt the user and push them into doing things that make the company money. The greatest lie in tech is that Facebook...
Anything simple. I’m using Linear at my current job, which is fine. I’ve used Trello in the past, also fine. Best experience so far was using the GitLab issue tracker, but it as not a product team so YMMV.
Maybe. I guess I hate the idea behind Jira more than Jira itself. I call it middle management driven Agile.
Also doesn’t help that Jira (and Confluence) were fucking slow for a long while. Nobody wants to use slow software as an integral part of the dev chain.
Just for counting? For speed also? (lemmy.world)
Yeah I know these are used for counting vehicles but can they also be used for detecting vehicle speed?...
Reddit Will License Its Data to Train LLMs, So We Made a Firefox Extension That Lets You Replace Your Comments (theluddite.org)
cross-posted from: lemmy.ca/post/19946388...
They're Looting The Internet (www.wheresyoured.at)
This is the state of the modern internet — ultra-profitable platforms outright abdicating any responsibility toward the customer, offering not a “service” or a “portal,” but cramming as many ways to interrupt the user and push them into doing things that make the company money. The greatest lie in tech is that Facebook...
WebMD forcing employees back to office. "We aren’t asking or negotiating at this point. We’re informing" (ody.sh)
This leaked today from inside webmd, the most bullshit corpo HR video I think I’ve ever seen....
Ministers warn English councils not to adopt four-day working weeks (www.theguardian.com)
Which conditions would make reject or quit your job?
Being forced to use a particular OS, hardware or programming language? Working remotely? Certain company structure?