We know where it broke, but we can’t see why. Was it a race condition? Did a database read return stale data that has since been overwritten? To find the cause, we have to mentally reconstruct the state of the world as it existed milliseconds before the crash. Welcome to debugging hell.
Software Freedom Conservancy sfconservancy.org🇺🇸
。Line官方版本下载对此有专业解读
Well, yes, because that was the state of technology in the 1930s. But it would
The headline: 96.5% of confusables.txt is not high-risk
As far as WIRED can tell, no one has ever died because a piece of space station hit them. Some pieces of Skylab did fall on a remote part of Western Australia, and Jimmy Carter formally apologized, but no one was hurt. The odds of a piece hitting a populated area are low. Most of the world is ocean, and most land is uninhabited. In 2024, a piece of space trash that was ejected from the ISS survived atmospheric burn-up, fell through the sky, and crashed through the roof of a home belonging to a very real, and rightfully perturbed, Florida man. He tweeted about it and then sued NASA, but he wasn’t injured.