Calling in a sentence as a noun

I'm busy helping people while you're busy calling me a cock. **** you.

Questions to ask yourself before "calling out bad code". 1.

Being professional means not calling people names. All of this stuff is what you get taught in kindergarten, it's not rocket science.

But to turn around and smile and take a picture, post it to Twitter, and then continue on calling oneself Joan of Arc? Christ, that is beyond the pale.

Richard Stallman is absolutely correct in calling this spyware. At the very least, this "feature" should be off by default.

I am also astounded that people on HN are calling this a legitimate business. What was its business?

I'm only very slightly joking, merely to avoid calling out the actual companies and services. You know what changes the world?

You might have this great idea but only 2 people are willing to work the occasional weekend on it; are you about to start an email chain calling them all dogshit coders? Linus doesn't have that problem.

I have an account with Network Solutions that they will not let me cancel without calling their sales team. I do not have an active credit card on file with them nor do I have any domains or hosting services.

I'm definitely calling "Dark Pattern" on this one. Hiding important text off the screen, coloring the important text a light grey, even when the text is visible it is far down the right side in a small font.

What's funny about this is that every comment here is calling this useless, yet it's something that's very much in the hacker spirit. Utility is not the end goal of everything.

Which, if you know your history, is not a whole lot different than Linus back when he was calling out Minix for being ****. The challenge here is that the barrier to speaking on the interwebs is quite low so you can make a fool of yourself if you're not careful.

People are complaining that stuff like voice calling, and some Talk features are missing, but it's probably due to focus on shipping something that works good first. It's inevitable people will reverse engineer the client, as was done with MSN, Y!

Yet imagine your boss calling you on a Sunday and saying, "So I was reviewing the DBA's data model for the new product, and I really don't like how he's called the columns with customers identifiers 'cust_id' instead of 'customer_id.' We use 'customer_id' in all our other tables.

And in this sense, calling ourselves job creators isn't just inaccurate, it's disingenuous." Again, the delivery here is terrible, IMO, but I think his overall point is largely correct.

As a black programmer, I remember the cliche about problems and regular expressions in my head as "regular expressions are like calling the cops." That's unfair to regular expressions, though, because I actually have seen them solve a problem before.

Anyone who does less programming that what is mentioned above cannot call himself a "good programmer", I would have serious reservations in calling that person even a mediocre programmer.

Above everything else, though, even if the OP is right about the identity of the scammer, calling out the scammer's employment means the OP could be attacking his family. If I were the aforementioned company I'd cut my losses and terminate the employee for bad PR. Now the OP has potentially hurt the suspected perpetrator's family based on actions his family is probably not even familiar with.

I appreciate the cheekiness of calling it the "Dark Mail Alliance", but from a purely PR perspective, it would make sense to reconsider your name if you are taking the position that encrypted end-to-end email is not solely an interest of those pursuing shady or deviant activities.

Vice presidents calling her to their room and offering her promotions if only she would give them weekly blowjobs, prospective customers turning away from million-dollar deals at the last minute after she refused to sleep with them, etc. The really sad thing about is that the vast majority of guys I talk to about this topic are simply not aware that women, especially attractive women, go through stuff like this all the time.

Calling definitions

noun

the particular occupation for which you are trained

See also: career vocation