Is it? In the US the majority of my coworkers just drop in (virtually or not) to ask questions without saying hi (even at the start of a sentence containing the question). That's not true for other countries.
Requirements are important and some organizations and all kind of engineers struggle to define or follow them. However I don't agree with the article that one has to choose between creativity vs defining and following requirements. There is space for both and the context of the business will clarify the most suited balance.
I browsed through it shortly but it is impressive. When it comes to existing resources, the boring university classes can actually be navigated online. For this topic CS-152 from Berkeley could be a nice followup (https://inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~cs152/sp23/) and there's a CPU design project in CS-61C that should cover everything you learned if you want to apply the knowledge to a concrete design.
The answer is actually not that easy to find when searching for less than 5 minutes.
The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is apparently 440 ppm. CH4 (methane) is 1.85 ppm.
At identical concentration levels CH4 is 84 times more impactful greenhouse effect than CO2 over the course of 10 to 20 years and 28 over 100 years. So it should be about 35% of the global CO2 effect short term (which is not the total but close, probably ?), so highly significant. Curiously the number that I found is around 10-20% so either my numbers are wrong or other graphs I found use confusing units.
Just for reference, start emacs once, run M-x server-start and set your global git editor to emacsclient -t and you end up with an instant in terminal emacs editor for git, that will also leverage magit when necessary.
<< Soft No(-2) means “Nah, there’s just something that doesn’t feel right” << or “Loved her, just not for this role”
<<So remember this when hiring: the person you are interviewing may be <<terrible for the role, but perfect for your company.
<<When you find that awesome person, hire them.
I hope there was a little bit more consistency between the rules explained here.