This is a person that appears to actually think XML is great, so I wouldn’t expect them to have valid opinions on anything really lol
This is a person that appears to actually think XML is great, so I wouldn’t expect them to have valid opinions on anything really lol
Sounds about right for an academic computer scientist, they are usually terrible software engineers.
At least that’s what I saw from the terrible coding practices my brother learned during his CS degree (and what I’ve seen from basically every other recent CS grad entering the workforce that didn’t do extensive side projects and self teaching) that I had to spend years unlearning him afterwards when we worked together on a startup idea writing lots of code.
Thanks I’ll back these up as well!
All Citra repos including dependencies archived here: https://archive.org/download/citra-emu_GitHub_03-04-2024
Also latest Citra binaries for all platforms here: https://archive.org/download/citra-latest-builds-4th-march-2024
Breakpad (and all other dependencies–well anything hosted by Yuzu team on Github anyway) are included in this archive: https://archive.org/download/yuzu-emu_GitHub_03-04-2024
Even better, there’s full archives of all yuzu and citra GitHub repos on archive.org. Yuzu depends on a bunch of other repos they had hosted on their GitHub to build. Same with Citra. All of that is included, plus full git history, in the archive.org 7z files. The torrents are actually really fast right now as there are a lot of seeders. Highly recommend downloading while you can in case Nintendo files a DMCA.
https://archive.org/download/yuzu-emu_GitHub_03-04-2024
https://archive.org/download/citra-emu_GitHub_03-04-2024
Plus latest Yuzu and Citra binaries:
https://archive.org/details/yuzu-latest-builds-4th-march-2024
https://archive.org/download/citra-latest-builds-4th-march-2024
Also Yuzu Wiki with full git history (for some reason missing from the archive.org backup)
Is there any way to download the whole git repo with history from that archive? Their FAQ seems to indicate there’s a way:
If absolutely needed, you can use the more expensive “revision” option of the Download button, that will prepare for you the equivalent of a git bare clone , which you will be able to use offline. This may require quite some time (hours, or even days for huge repositories).
But when I got to a repo I don’t see a “revision” option when I click the download button…
Yep that’s the right attitude to have I think. Soon enough it’ll be over and you’ll have your license back. Best of luck on the job hunt friend.
Yeah it’s unfortunate you had to learn that lesson the hard way, but cops are not there to help you in any way regardless of the ridiculous “protect and serve” slogan they love to use. They’ve literally fought and won multiple cases to prove they don’t have to help people. It’s fucked.
I assume most “normal” people do watch it anyway which is why it’s all over every porn site. If only people into that fetish watched it and it hurt traffic they wouldn’t plaster it all over every front page…
Haha crazy to randomly come across that name on Lemmy. I bought a bunch of the parts for my NAS/Proxmox server from that seller a couple years ago.
I’m just amazed they haven’t shut down Google groups by now…
Oh man I totally forgot about that! Oh nice they have it in ebook and pdf formats now
Apple doesn’t review it that thoroughly. They could easily send people’s credentials up to some server and Apple would likely not catch it.
What I mean is don’t just trust it because it’s in the App Store.
I personally use it because it has an active GitHub and is one of the more popular mobile clients. Also I don’t really care if my accounts get hacked in the first place lol so I’m also trying out Mlem beta and Wefwef. But even with that said I wouldn’t just try out any random new client that came along.
Also if it’s a desktop app they could just put the malicious code in the binary download 99% of people will use, or if it’s a web app, they just put it in their hosted version, etc.
I totally agree with using strong unique password manager generated passwords for every server (as everyone should do for every service they use regardless) but my email has been leaked so many times by so many breaches I’m not sure I really care about that part at this point…
Nice work! I tried this out a few months ago (maybe longer?) and it was still a bit too rough around the edges but I liked the concept. I’ll download it again today and give the new update a spin!