Based, but GitLab is GitHub’s primary competitor, which highlights how ridiculous it is that GitHub still has no IPv6
He / They
Software Developer
Based, but GitLab is GitHub’s primary competitor, which highlights how ridiculous it is that GitHub still has no IPv6
Yeah GitHub out there being silly
That’s what it is
Thank you, I knew the rule but did not know it had a name.
Qt 3.14 came out a long time ago.
She’s gay.
I don’t think 201.-9 is a valid IP path 🤔
Ah yes, the RCS problem. Thanks for the clarification!
tl;dr why have they taken a stance against it?
What if they were all female?
That’s fair, but they tend to be more right than an LLM :P
Good thing, you don’t want medical advice from an LLM
Do you want to see Mozilla and Firefox die a hero, or do you want to see it live long enough to become the villain?
With the US ruling of Google being a monopoly, Mozilla is bound to lose a lot of their income if that’s the decision that comes to pass. I’m happy with the courts ruling Google as a monopoly (because they are), but it does mean Mozilla needs to try to make money some other way.
Genuine question, would you be willing to pay for all the content you consume using a “token” system where each page, video or other piece of media has a price to it, usually about a cent per article or 5c per video, is automatically debited from either an account loaded with real money or some sort of blockchain, at the discretion of the user? A token could be one cent.
There’d be an open API, and multiple brokers could handle that transaction for you, so there is no vendor lock-in. You could even be your own broker if you set up your own server that talks to the servers hosting any media you’d like to consume. It would get rid of online advertising, but you have to pay out of pocket for server costs and content creation costs.
Ever had a spaghetti burger?
I do, I have a 2K display with lots of horizontal space. Vertical tabs allow me to better group and see tab names in vertical space rather than trying to line up truncated tab names on a horizontal axis.
Looks like this post worked just fine :)
That’s a cabbage.
What they don’t understand is their own machine can get compromised, and in turn compromise their accesses and other infrastructure in a pivot attack.
Developers tend to have quite a lot of access, and some can even deploy to production. At my company, the dev workstations are even more locked down than the regular users’ computers for that reason, they can’t even leave the province.