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From YouTube: 2022-03-08 meeting
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B
A
Is
this
something
new
I
I'm
still
using
by
default,
the
white
theme-
and
I
prefer
using
the
dark
ones,
usually.
B
Now
I
installed
a
plug-in
a
browser
plug-in
okay,
yeah.
A
B
I
don't
know,
though
I
was
I
so
I
tried
like
about
a
week
ago.
I
don't
know
I
was
just
getting
these
eye
headaches,
so
I
tried
to
like
switch
everything
into
dark
mode
and
it
hasn't
really.
I
can't
say
it's
really
helped.
C
A
But
these
are
only
for
the
night
because
they
completely
block
out
all
blue
light,
so
apparently
you're
not
supposed
to
use
them
during
the
day
because
it
confuses
ice
and
your
your
brain.
So
only
after
sunset.
B
C
B
The
logs
from
it
and
even
tried
looking
at
the
code
a
little
bit,
let's
look
at
a
good
one
to
look
at
is
here
because
it
forced
big
builds.
So
what
I
see
is
that
what
I
see
is
that
the
dependencies.
B
Are
based
on
the
gradle
home
that
gets
pulled
back
so
like
here's,
an
example
of
where
it
asked
for
test,
but
it
got
a
test
latest
depths,
gradle
user
home,
and
inside
of
that,
I
think,
is
where
they
store
the
references
to
these
other
artifacts
like
the
generated
gradle
jars.
The.
B
B
A
separate
it's
a
separate
cache
entry
and
what
I
think.
I
think
that,
because
I
was
looking
at
you
had
pointed
out,
the
the
docs
say
that
it's
like
cached
independently
and
I
don't
think
they
mean
independently,
meaning
like
shared
across
everybody,
but
just
as
a
separate
cash
entry.
C
B
C
Like
we'd
expect
the
code
ql
user
home
to
be
the
same
as
a
normal
build
user
form,
so
those
should
be
the
same
cache
rate
at
least
the
dependency
subfolder
within
the
user.
B
Yeah
so
one
of
the
things
that
in
in
a
perfect
world,
yes,
one
of
the
things
that
I
see
where
like
in
this
example,
they
restore
the
test
latest,
but
then
they
re
save
it
back
to
test.
So
you
get
this
like
cross
pollution.
C
C
B
C
C
B
Well,
we've
got
to
get
there
first,
we're
still
not
in
a
in
that
state.
C
B
Yeah,
it's
just
it's
not
going
to
it's
not
going
to
get
any.
I
don't
think
it's
going
to
get
any
right,
it's
going
to
say
in
the
instrumentation
repo
code
ql,
so
if
it
doesn't
have
its
own
cache
entry,
it's
just
gonna
pick
one
of
these,
basically
at
random.
C
B
Dependencies
like
it's
not
random
for
dependencies.
It
is,
though,
it's
based
on
which
user
home
you
get
so
once
you
get
this
user
home
inside
of
here
is
my
understanding.
Is
they
store
this
json
file
that
had
that's
how
it
right?
So
they
do
bundle
everything
together.
It's
all
in
this
user,
home
right,
they're,
basically
storing
the
whole
user
home
caching,
your
whole
user
home
they're,
just
caching,
a
few
different,
the
parts
of
it
separately,
so
that
those
separate
parts
can
be
shared
by
other
user
homes.
B
C
B
You
restore
this
one,
you
get
the
test
latest
depth
dependencies
and
that's
why
I
see
this
one
here.
That
was
a
test.
I
know
that
it's
keep
pulling
down.
C
B
And
I
can
see
I
can
look
at
this
hash
across
here.
This
is
the
same
hash
that
is
pulled
down.
C
B
So
if
you
have
two
user
homes
right,
the
user
homes
are
specific
to
both
the
job
and
the
matrix.
So
that's
why
one
of
the
recent
prs
I
sent
stopped
made
it
read.
Only
only
one
of
the
matrix
items
will.
C
B
To
cache
this
here,
this
here
is
the
commit,
and
this
here
is
the
matrix
input.
Args
to
I
mean
test
latest
step
is
doesn't
have
a
matrix,
but
for
like
smoke
test
it
does
and
so
say
you
didn't
do
this,
then
maybe
all
of
your
but
the
smoke
test
wouldn't
help.
If
you,
if
all
your
matrix
things
were
running
the
same,
build
pulling
down
the
same
dependencies,
that
would
you
would
get
the
same
hash
of
the
contents
for
those
dependencies.
B
C
B
Yeah,
if
we
manage,
if
we
managed
it
ourselves,
yeah
and
I'm
I
kind
of
think
that
might
be
a
good
idea.
I
was
just
messing
around
with
because
the
other
thing
is
we
don't
really
that
gradle
cache
we're
using
the
gradle
enterprise
cache.
B
Yeah
so
yeah,
so
I
was
thinking
of
and
I
checked
and
that's
a
good
size
of
the
cache
in
there
also.
C
B
C
B
B
But
we
can
tweet,
we
can't
fine-tune
what's
in
there.
So,
although
I
don't
know
if
I
can
fine-tune
the
dependencies.
B
C
B
C
C
B
I
over
here
we're
not
hitting
our.
C
B
Problem
we're
not
hitting
the
limit,
so
I
think
it's
probably
fine
just
to
like
this.
For
now
I
think
we'll
the
instrumentation
repo
is
where,
where
will
once
we
decide
on
a
strategy
that
works
for
instrumentation
repo,
then
we
can
propagate
that
out
to
the
others.
C
B
C
C
B
C
B
And
now
does
does
this
need
to
go
through
spec
for
a
new
option?
There.
B
It's
not
a
it's,
not
a
any
kind
of
rush
for
me,
because
this
is
gonna
for
now
at
least
I'm
I'm
at
a
impasse
with
the
customer.
That's
having
this,
because
they
don't
want
to
deploy
it
until
it's
released,
and
I
don't
really
want
to
release
it
until
they
test
it
and
see.
If
this
even
will.
B
Issue
so
I
mean
I'll-
probably
release
it
anyway,
but
that
it's
internal
stuff
anyway.
I
mostly
just
kind
of
wanted
to
get
thoughts
and
I
would
have
made
it
draft,
but
I
know
nobody
looks
at
drafts
so
I'll
convert
it
back
to
draft
everyone.
A
C
But
I
do
sometimes
use
a
strategy
of
open
it
as
normal
and
then
convert
to
graph.
C
B
C
C
B
But
if
we
don't
do
that,
then
I'll
probably
revert
the
change.
The
log
for
j,
the
spi
change
that
I
made,
which
then
broke
you
so
I'll,
probably
break
you
again
by
reverting
that.
C
C
A
A
Yeah,
that's
that's
fair,
I
suppose
yep,
I'm
okay,
with
that.
The
only
thing
that
we
should
probably
make
sure
of
is
that
the
transition
is
painless
for
anybody
who
uses
it
and
apparently
a
few
people
already
started
using
it.
A
It's
a
good
question
that
somebody
uses
it
as
a
library
yeah.
I
know
yeah
it's,
it's
probably
a
good
idea
to
do
this.
A
A
Well,
I
I
won't
probably
manage
to
because
I'm
since
I
came
back,
I'm
swamped
with
so
many
value
things
that
yeah
I
would
like
to,
but
I
rather
doubt
that
it's
possible.
Oh
I've,
only
got
one
question:
does
the
1.12
release
have
the
possibility
of
cancelling
the
observables
the
essence
instruments?
Oh
okay,
yeah?
So
that
makes
the
micrometer
thing
that
should
make
the
micrometer
shim
completely
independent
of
instrumentation
api.
Then
I'll.
Remove
the
async
instrument
registry
hack.
C
A
I'm
still
trying
to
solve
all
those
instrumentation
api
issues,
but
it
takes
time.
C
C
B
Did
we're
still
waiting
for
a
repro?
Aren't
we.
A
Yeah
by
the
way,
what
do
you
think
of
switching
the
other
to
suppress
something
something
properties
to
the
something
something
that
enabled
a
form
there's
the.
A
Control,
oh
controller
and
use
yeah,
so
these
are
the
only
properties
that
use
the
suppressed
subject,
something
form
and
every
other
enable
disable
property
like
boolean
property
uses
something
something
that
enabled
so
should
we
switch
them.
A
B
A
B
And
so
just
making
these
still
true
by
default,
yeah.
C
B
A
B
Yeah
that
chip
has
sailed.
Yes,
as
they
say,
yeah
sounds.
B
Oh
honorary
cornered
you
here
so
the
question
here
is
capture
http
headers.
C
C
A
C
C
C
C
A
Yeah
and
if
you
make
them
additive,
you
probably
wouldn't
be
able
to
override
the
defaults
which
are
which
are
extracted
from
the
configuration.
So
I
thought
that
we
should
probably
use
the
set
cache
setters.
C
C
A
Okay,
so
should
we
remove
or
make
not
public
the
the
whole
captured
hp
headers
object?
Because
if,
if
we
are
going
to
add
these
two
methods,
then
I
suppose
that
we
should
expose.
You
know
just
only
one
method
to
set
this
kind
of
thing.
A
Yeah,
if.
C
C
C
A
It
I
thought
it
sounded
better,
the
first
time
that
I
wrote
it,
but
recently
I
look
at
it
and
oh,
is
it
additive
or
not.
C
A
I
will
merge
this
as
it
is
and
introduce
the
new
methods
in
a
separate
vr,
because
that
separate
vr
will
probably
get
a
little
bit
big.
So
it's
better
to
split
this
cool.
A
Oh
is:
is
this
something
that's
solved
by
the
1.12
sdk2?
B
B
You
push
if
you
push.
C
B
C
C
B
Yeah,
so
you
left
a
oh
yes,
yes,
I
had
just
had
it
looked
carefully.
It.
C
B
B
B
I
think
that's
my
limit
is
five
retries
at
two
minutes
apart.
I'm
not
gonna,
keep
just
bumping
it.
Oh,
it's
really
annoying,
maybe
I'll
just
keep
with
the
five
retries
but
bump
them
like
five
minutes.
Apart.
C
B
I
think
they've,
I
think
that
they've
got
their
they're
they're
kind
of
busy
occupied
with
other
things.
C
A
I
don't
think
I've
provided
any.
Are
they.
A
Yeah,
so
there's
really
a
lot
of
refugees
from
ukraine
coming
here
and
it's
I
checked
before
the
weekend.
It
was
like
way
over
half
a
million
of
people
and
it's
probably
something
up
to
600k
right
now,
which
is
really
a
lot
and
it's
it's
really
not
disabled.
You
know,
even
in
day-to-day
life
I
mean
I
spent
last
almost
the
whole
last
two
weeks
in
my
apartment,
because
I
was
current
tired
and
could
not
go
out,
but
the
first
time
I
went
out
shopping.
A
We
actually
I
mean
there
have
been
some
some
shortages
in
the
supermarket
that
I
went
to
and
there's
been
like
really
a
lot
of
people
buying
stuff,
and
I
I
couldn't
even
see
some
people,
like
you
know,
going
with
the
refugees
that
they
were
helping
to
and
saying
that
hey
pick
up
any
stuff
you
want
we'll
buy,
for
we
buy
it
for
you.
A
So
in
that
way
it's
it's
really
nice
and
it's
uplifting
that
really
a
lot
of
people
just
rushed
in
to
help
and
yeah
that
that
is
really
good.
But,
on
the
other
hand,
a
lot
of
people
here
just
have
this
kind
of
a
doomsday
approach
to
things
and
a
lot
of
people
are
really
scared
of
nuclear
apocalypse.
A
In
case
we
just
hit
the
button,
so
it's
been
really
hectic
the
last
week
or
so,
but
yeah
anyway,
it's
still
okay.
Here
I
mean
it
over
in
this
part
of
nato,
so
we're
probably
in
we
probably
a
bit
safer
than
our
eastern
neighbors,
but
but
yeah
you
can
see
the
effects
of
war.
Here
too,.
A
B
A
I
mean
we're
like
poles
and
ukrainians
have
very
similar
culture.
I
mean
even
the
cuisine
is
kind
of
the
same,
and
the
languages
are
also
sort
of
similar.
So
you
know
if
two
sides
speak
very
slowly,
their
own
language.
We
can
sort
of
understand
each
other,
so
it's
probably
like
the
natural
choice
to
you
know
go
go
to
poland
because
it's
probably
the
easiest
to
to
live
here
for
ukrainian
people.
B
Yeah
it's
well,
it's
is
that
the
largest,
the
closest
big
city.
A
A
Yeah,
honestly,
I
don't
know
how
how
you
know
that
the
refugees
spread
across
poland.
They
probably
stick
to
big
cities,
because
you
know
it's
probably
easier
to
find
the
accommodation
here.
I
know
that
warsaw
has
a
huge
problem
with
that,
because
so
many
people
it's
like
over
100
000
people,
just
went
straight
to
warsaw
and
they're
just
running
out
of
out
of
living
space
out
of
basically
everything
foodstuffs
and
so
on.
But
yeah.
C
A
Yeah,
it's
it's
not
that
bad
they
not
empty,
but
you
can
see
that
there's
like
less
things
to
choose
from
you
know,
but
some
some
things
are
just
completely
bought
out
sold
out.
But
it's
not
that
bad.
So
I
think
that
we're
still
like
holding
on
and.
C
B
C
A
I
have
the
news
opened
up
like
pretty
much
the
whole
time,
and
I
do
I
just
you
know,
switch
and
read
from
time
to
time
and
yeah
it's
nerve-wracking,
but
on
the
other
hand,
I'm
I'm
very
glad
that
the
russians
didn't
manage
to
go
that
far
this
that
they
haven't
still
captured
kiev,
which
is
great
because
if
the
capital
would
fall,
it
would
probably
be
very
discarded
for
everybody.
C
C
A
C
A
B
Yeah
well,
yeah,
I'm
glad
we
can
keep
you
keep
you
keep
you
busy,
keep
you
thinking
about
something
yeah.
B
A
And
it's
crazy:
it's
happening
like
less
than
a
day
of
traveling
by
car
from
here.
A
C
B
See
you
thursday,
mateish
see
you
friday
on
iraq,
any
yeah
just
ping
me.
If
there's
any
interest
in
the
release
happening
sooner
otherwise
I'll
probably
plan
to
do
it.
Like
thursday,
friday.