Also of course, Cider will dehydrate you so thats a bad choice. I'm knocking back some lovely ice cold (and I mean ice cold) blackcurrant drink I mixed earlier and popped in the fridge (always in this heat have at least 3 litres of it in there).
I also change it around for orange drink sometimes to keep the flavor fresh.
If I go to an airshow, I do the same thing but pop them in the freezer (allowing some space in the bottle for expansion) and they are delicious frozen, always reminds me of the orange Jubbly we used to buy from the sweet shop (frozen of course), fantastic on a hot day.
I've got a freezer full of coke and strawberry jubblies. Spot on they are the best. Prefer the orange ones but Tesco are out of everything cold and interesting.
Cider does dehydrate you, you're right. That's why I have a water chaser
So I'm working from home today and it's summer holidays. This morning I had three children, two of whom are teenagers. Two additional teenagers turned up this afternoon and they have been practicing Guns N' Roses and Iron Maiden all afternoon, badly. Thank fuck none of them have a drumkit (yet). Yep straight back up.
Edit: forgot to mention I'm knocking back cider which makes it slightly better
I'll get my Brother-in-Law to pop round with his drum kit, Guns N' Roses, Iron Maiden and Pink Floyd are his favorite bands, should be good fun.
If he's good I don't mind.
To be fair on this lot it's quite a new thing. They've only started playing in the last year and have basically taught themselves off YouTube. I'm quite impressed so far.
Good news here. Literally just got signed off and paid on our project with one day to go. Taking next month off now for TEA and radio fun. hence celebratory cider
Tropicana used to offer their Pure Premium OJ in a package like your Jubbly there; was a popular thing when I grew up in Pittsburgh to keep them in the freezer. All the gas stations had them right next to the Good Humor. I preferred the Extra Pulp; the bits captured all the sugar when the thing froze and it was crunchy-sweet-colder-than-hell on a sooty, sweaty day growing up in steel mill hell. That followed by a Regent's Egg Creme in the pony bottle... *sigh*.
Sitting here with the stereo blasting listening to Imagine Dragons last album on Amazon... I remember when my wife was pregnant with my son, we saw them play in a club in Chicago. They were just kids all full of piss & vinegar and no direction...
now they're full of anti-establishment rage with a fine honed edge.
Our little boi band is all growed up... where did the time go?
But... PayDay is ALWAYS good!
14,350 unit tests. 205 integration tests. 45 post infrastructure validation tests. 2 DR process documents. Well tested at least. There’s 2.5x as much test code as runtime.
So you know where the undiscovered problems aren't. Me a pessimist? Surely shome mishtake!
"You can't test quality into a product" - old engineering aphorism, that is unknown to young software weenies (For the avoidance of doubt, I'm not classifying you as a young weenie!)
Yes and no. You write the test suite first which defines what the system should do. Then you make it do that. Then the system does what it should do with the warranty stating officially that we know it does what we intended it to do but we don’t know about all the things we didn’t think about. Then someone else gets their hands on it and breaks it, you write a test case that breaks it, then you fix the code so the test passes.
The outcome is simply: it does what we think it does and doesn’t do some things we know it shouldn’t. In a Venn diagram there’s a big wasteland outside that full of tigers and zombies that we don’t tell anyone about in the software industry. Occasionally one gets inside the compound and we shoot it and blame it on another vendor quickly while sipping cocktails on the beach.
When I was first in engineering school we were taught that quality isn't a matter of tests & measures; it's the art of design rather than the science of it. If you design with 110% duty cycle in mind, your entire project will benefit, and never be found lacking. 125% is better, but rare is the situation where you can slip that much quality past the bean-counters. The ability to find the right balance between the two that actually can survive through R&D, Test Run & Revision, and finally make it to production which makes a great engineer.
You're talking software though... I dunno how well that analogy translates. I've always found it much easier to think like an electron with its tendency towards laziness and shades of grey vs thinking like a bit which is YES/NO and occasionally a blanket GO FU** YOURSELF.
To bring things back on topic... I just scored this thing for cheap:
Its quite the boat anchor at 27kg (59lb) and 4 triax connectors on the back (Good thing i have cables for it). However the problem is that the damn thing does not work. Repair thread:
That there is a right proper boat anchor... as much computer as measuring instrument. Thread noted and inappropriate comments left as required by custom.
mnem
*Unrepentantly math-defective*