Read the BDD style acceptance tests that were written during development.
This is the one chance you get to preserve that knowledge when it fresh and correct. Asking someone three years later (even the original dev) is no substitute.
Oh, and you can also run the tests to ensure correctnes.
If you are at JPMorgan or aerospace today using quantum computing, there is a very good chance you are using an IBM Heron 156 qubit scalable computer. They have been pushing quantum computers into very large companies for quite awhile now.
Google is strictly in research mode, but doing a lot of good, hard work.
You should know, that by removing all alcohol, caffeine and sugar, red meat, bacon, eggs and sausages from your diet, you can get rid of what joy you have left in your life.
They are more expensive. Because the lock-in isn't as tight.
I still like them because, ironically, for sporadic printing, they're more resilient than many ink cartridges.
So far, I haven't experienced any clogging (dried up ink in the print heads) or the printer resorting to ink consuming processes every time it's turned on after not having been used for a couple of weeks.
This is after some years of usage where I've refilled the tanks once.
Not great. They still clog, the printer still wastes a ton of ink on cleaning or adjustment or whatever. Last time I had one I woke up one day to find that all of the yellow ink was gone. Several ounces of ink presumably dumped into a sponge inside the printer. I chucked the whole damn mess in the trash and bought a Brother laser printer.
Avoid vague terms like “size” when talking about a wheel. A car wheel all has a diameter, usually expressed in inches, and a width also usually expressed in inches.
It’s not clear to me which dimension folks are saying, has a relationship to brake size. I’m imagining width is the dimension related to wind efficiency, but I would nonetheless ask folks to use more accurate terms like wheel diameter or width.