It’s absolutely fine, it was mildly annoying the first two times and now in glad I don’t have to hold the cap while drinking.
It’s absolutely fine, it was mildly annoying the first two times and now in glad I don’t have to hold the cap while drinking.
What a weird set of events. It’s not even clear what was actually used as infection method.
Depends on why you want to hide your server ip, what’s your use case? Is it to protect against DDOS?
Cloudflare is evil, but is there any other party you would trust to share everything with?
Don’t worry, it’s fine, there’s nothing inherently wrong with running stateful workload in a container.
You should really back that up with arguments as I don’t think a lot of people would agree with you.
I have an axe to grind with fakespot. My wife has a tiny business and is one of the most honest and sweet people I know. She would never pay for fake reviews and she wouldn’t even have the knowledge on how to do so. Someone (not even us, mind you) posted a link to her product on Reddit and a Fakespot robot instantly called her out for supposedly having suspicious reviews, even though each and every order (and thus each and every review resulting from that) was legit. Her product was then mocked and all it did was give my wife stress.
So yeah, take them with a grain of salt. They are probably pretty good on average but some innocent people get caught in it as collateral damage.
Welp, this is the most left field KilledByGoogle entry yet.
I highly recommend reading the Github thread as this is not at all an accurate representation. These features you’re talking about are off by default. Removing them from the existing package is just breaking existing users. There’s already a report from a user who can’t access their passwords because yubikey support was suddenly removed. You don’t do that to users just because you suddenly develop an opinion as a package maintainer that you feel is important. There was no dialogue, no consideration and a very rude, dismissive attitude of Julian.
Alternatively, “I am your father, you piece of shit.”
Either you misunderstand or the person you are responding to is. If you retroactively add a license to the current state of the code (for example by committing a new LICENSE file and adding the new license to the top of each file), or course that applies to the entire state of that code as of that commit. What is more difficult is that earlier commits won’t have that license explicitly unless you rewrite git history to make that happen (which is possible but tedious).
You can always relicense code you own the rights to. You can even dual license it, or continue to use it commercially in terms contradicting the license you open sourced it as, as long as you have the permission of every contributor.
The idea that a license added would only apply to code added after the license change is very funny.
Already?!
Hello neighbor! I’ve had them prescribed, but when asked if it was really necessary or if I could give it a bit longer to see if my body could deal with it on its own, my doctor got a big smile and told me he could. Then he said that the dominant demographic in my area is very persistent and pushy in demanding antibiotics for the slightest thing so he’s gotten a bit too used to prescribing them.
Used to be Sketchup, not sure if that’s still around for free. Used for a lot of architectural stuff and somewhat beginner friendly.
Me personally I’d use Blender, but that seemingly requires you to learn how to model donuts with sprinkles first…
You’re not entirely clear on whether you want these services accessible from the internet or just internally. If the latter, change ACME settings to use DNS challenges instead of HTTP. If the former, recheck your dns records, maybe post them here (censored if you wish).
There might be settings in the bios that allow you to disable the graphics card, not halt on errors or disable the internal screen, but they’re not usually exposed on laptop BIOS, they’re quite locked down.
It’s more that your phone has one accidentally registered you typing it capitalized and remembered it as a “name”, deleting that suggestion allows it to reverts to the non-capitalized version.
Long press on the wrong suggestion usually gives you an option to delete it from the dictionary.
Add SponsorBlock for in-video sponsors while you’re at it!
Please point out the actual transphobia? You can’t just use that word willy-nilly.