Why would a bot get that wrong? Everyone blames everything slightly odd on bits nowadays…
Why would a bot get that wrong? Everyone blames everything slightly odd on bits nowadays…
No you’re not, you’re quoting in a misleading way, you are drawing your own (incorrect) conclusion that recovering 1b cost 80b which is patently incorrect even in the bit of the article you quoted and you refuse to engage anyone who is poining out that you’re wrong using good faith arguments, instead saying you’re “just reading and quoting” which is the equivalent of covering your ears and going “LALALA”.
One rule could be censoring information that could plausibly out someone, such as the name of a (step?)family-member
I mean, it must be very difficult to checks notes host a static document in a scalable way.
But still, if only they had an asynchronous, distributed way of publishing this information. Like old school letters, only digital. That would help them decrease the load on their infrastructure…
At least one per week, in various ways. Websites that no longer exist, obscure media I want to study… It’s great!
You think they’re not doing both?
It’s alright. I use both their desktop backup service and B2 extensively. Their desktop client and web interface is very basic and a bit rough, you don’t buy their service for the well-developed UI. The service works as advertised though.
The headache comes up when multiple third party repositories start conflicting with each other
Which is traditionally why you needed the distro to package your software…
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.
So you’re always behind, patching up small bits of code that don’t comply with your guidelines, while letting big changes with, by deduction, worse code quality through?
It is. Originally they were a MIPS-like, then they licensed it and became MIPS-compatible, then they extended it into their own instruction set.
You don’t quite understand. One of the major drawbacks of UUIDs over monotonically increasing id’s is the lack of ability to sort them. Not just for manual querying, but for index operations, caching, data locality etc.
It’s very handy and is a big part of the reason why Twitter developed Snowflake IDs, which are basically like UUIDs v6 and v7.
The UUIDs specs are quite easy to understand and definitely not “enterprisey”.
They chose “version” because they are just that, versions. Improvements over the original design that benefit from new insights and technological improvements. We’re lucky they had the foresight to include a version number in the spec.
A lot of people in this thread who don’t fully understand how UUIDs work…
Why? They offer it as a fallback solution you have to explicitly enable, I can imagine it’s not their focus given that the regular connection is encrypted.
No it’s not, what a weird take. If I publish my art online for enthusiasts to see it’s not automatically licensed to everyone to distribute. If I specifically want to forbid entities I have huge ethical issues with (such as Google, OpenAI et. al.) from scraping and transforming my work, I should be able to.
I mean, both are true? It’s not a manipulative headline in my opinion.
When did you last check the statistic you just pulled from your ass? Bitlocker is on by default on all machines that support it, which is all pc’s and laptops being sold the past few years.
The only exception used to be when you bypass oobe to create a local user account, which also isn’t supported anymore.
Surely the majority of them are not suspects but witnesses. Why imprison them, even if it’s on land?
Fuuuuuuck