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Kinda curious what kind of posts you were making that got you this sort of treatment: maybe running up against some hyper specific filters?
I sometimes admin. But usually not.
Kinda curious what kind of posts you were making that got you this sort of treatment: maybe running up against some hyper specific filters?
Considering that he doesn’t have functioning arms… Probably.
Blind brand loyalty to something you don’t enjoy is a waste of your precious time on earth
You’re thinking of BD-R: BD-RE can be rewritten/erased hundreds of times
I feel like her reply is just as likely to be to call him a race traitor or whatever. It’s hard to reason with people who gatekeep that hard
If the GOP wanted to counterattack, they could always start funding hyper-progressive candidates too 🙂
I’d honestly prefer raw parroting in most cases, even if it’s “obviously” wrong. I don’t want people selectively interpreting the facts as have been conveyed to them, unless they’re prepared to do a proper peer review.
Though btw, I also think it’s fascinating the difference if you look up Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2 MW"
vs Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2MW"
You’ll get different articles entirely
I googled Pyhäsalmi Mine gravitricity "2 MW"
and EVERY article covering this has also cited 2 MW.
Now, under Occam’s Razor, what’s more likely:
I don’t know which one it is. But I’d generally lean against 1.
As a Bay area native, I’ve never encountered worse drivers than the entire state of Maryland.
An API token is more secure than a password by virtue of it not needing to be typed in by a human. Phishing, writing down passwords, and the fact that API tokens can have restricted scopes all make them more secure.
Expiration on its own doesn’t make it more secure, but it can if it’s in the context of loading the token onto a system that you might lose track of/not have access to in the future.
Individual API tokens can also be revoked without revoking all of them, unlike a password where changing it means you have to re-login everywhere.
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Lmk if you have questions, though.
Hey, I maintain a highly popular (if niche) FOSS library. Where the fuck is my big tech paycheck where they bribe me into integrating with their product?
/s Silly take IMO, relies on cherry-picking popular FOSS projects where you can see “the influence” of big tech, AND then No True Scotsman your way into saying that they’re not allowed to participate in the development/influence of FOSS because… checks notes they’re the ones funding the project/putting money in front of otherwise unpaid volunteers?
If you end up coming up with a better scheme for things that has the actual practical effect of compensating devs appropriately (yes, that means at current market rates or better) for their work, then please let us know so we can switch to doing that immediately. I will literally do anything you suggest if it would achieve that end.
So others have already talked about how great Star Trek is. I agree with them, but I think that literally everyone has missed the point of your question:
It’s its own lemmy instance. It was spawned from the migration away from reddit, and it’s stayed alive since. So combine an active former-reddit community with lemmy and a good reason to all rally around, and finally the final ingredient of federation, and the Star Trek related rooms will always be on every server, and they’ll always be populated.
Depending on whether this code is in a hotpath (and considering how “elementary” it is, I figure that’s a possibility), this could very well be a significant speed improvement.
Though I’d say that only excuses it if it’s truly an elementary function (and not one line as part of a larger function), as otherwise it’s unreadable garbage. But on its own it:
Right? Like, I felt like I was missing the punchline here.
From the top of this thread, Valve was suggested as a candidate for someone who might already be interested in these things, perhaps to the point of invested into each of those.
Or maybe they don’t. Maybe nobody does.
People can speculate and dream. Nobody’s speaking authoritatively here, and certainly nobody is petitioning that Linus himself get down and dirty in anti-cheat functionality.
Or here’s a revolutionary thought: let people voluntarily (and reversably) opt-in to kernel-level anti-cheats.
Part of freedom is the freedom to choose.
I hesitate to ask, but, why do you have your IP change every minute? You seem to have a very atypical usecase
Jesus fuck thank you, it’s so hard seeing a bunch of doomer shit in threads like this