I suspect your ‘tags’ is not a dict object, but some extension of it. Lookup its type, or the documentation of the library you are using for how to retrieve values from an ID3 object.
I suspect your ‘tags’ is not a dict object, but some extension of it. Lookup its type, or the documentation of the library you are using for how to retrieve values from an ID3 object.
Not sure if I understand, how does jellyfin not match? what features is it lacking?
I think your point here is relevant.
One can never truely evaluate its own competence.
A degree, or good reviews from collegues are good indications you are competent. But also these are not proof: it could be a result of incompetent collegues, or an education that was not that good.
Not having a degree, but saying you know for sure to not have any Kruger raises lots of eyebrows for me: you do not know what you do not know.
Coming back to op’s original question: the correlation comes from that education shows you what you do not know. You are getting involved with all kinds of subjects, and you get a grasp of how many there is left to learn and how smart certain things are. You might for example have never thought about the complexity of a compiler. This can make you feel dumber than if you would have never found out these fields existed.
Imo I think kruger is much more harmful than imposter
My previous company used Jira, and my current company uses Gitlab. For sprint management it works fine.
There might also be a philosophy aspect relevant here regarding ‘if your sprint management becomes too complex you might be misusing scrum/micromanaging too much’
Also curious what others here think about using gitlab for this, do you think it lacks features?
Nah I disagree, people can also send articles to friends