I find it hard to contribute to some projects because I don’t understand the overall architecture but I think contributing to unit testing is pretty simple. You just need to understand the smallest units of work, not the whole thing.
I’ve gone through bouts of depression and I know motivation is hard to come by but I think it’s difficult to be depressed when you’re in the middle of exercising. I know the ask was to make time go by faster and as someone else said certain activities can make your brain take a break. I feel like walking, running, or biking outside is a fairly good way for your muscles to do the thinking but less hamster wheel than going to a gym or exercising at home.
That’s one way to basically ensure the US never imposes pay caps on executives.
Other than the low chance of you being targeted I would say only expose your services through something like Wireguard. Other than the port being open attackers won’t know what it’s for. Wireguard doesn’t respond if you don’t immediately authenticate.
There’s a little overlap with things like Terraform but it’s not as bad as if they bought the companies that owned Chef or Puppet.
Can’t believe that’s gone through. They took JBoss when they bought RedHat so now it doesn’t have to compete with Websphere and when they bought HashiCorp Openshift doesn’t have to compete with Nomad. At this rate they’ll buy CyberArk and then that’s no more competition with Vault.
Ngrok
Twingate (what I use)
Zelda combat gives me way too many heart palpations. I also tried for like 2 hours to take down a guardian with shield blocking (eventually did) and I really don’t think I got any better at it.
Had some good gameplay here and there but didn’t seem engaged by the story. I guess that’s the biggest problem with open world games, that everyone can get the story fed to them in a different order.
I’m not experienced in the usual “hard games” but it feels like Noita is the Dark Souls of 2D gaming. If I get to the 3rd area I’m hanging on by a thread and every boss has totally owned me. Is everyone using like invulnerability potions or something to get through this? I do neglect potions a lot.
I really enjoyed the Ultima games, especially VII Serpent Isle. Got pretty far on VIII but that one was pretty buggy and froze too much for me to finish.
Even in this scenario it’s feasible for standards to change. ISBN-15 becomes a thing and suddenly you have books that never get an ISBN-13 so your primary key constraints cause an error for trying to insert a null. Granted, you can see a lot of these changes coming but again, they come on a schedule you don’t control.
Got hands on experience with this. Wasn’t my design choice but I inherited an app with a database where one of the keys was tied to a completely separate database. I mean at the time it probably made sense but the most unlikely of scenarios actually happened: that other database, the one I had zero control over, was migrated to a new platform. All of those keys were synthetic so of course they were like, “Meh, why we gotta keep the old keys?” So post-migration my app becomes basically useless and I spent 6 hours writing migration code, some of it on off hours, to fix my data.
So it’s questionable whether a foreign key of a completely different system is a natural key, but at the very least never use a key YOU don’t control.
Yup. That was the one. Quite sad, but possibly the native system throttles to improve battery.
Don’t know if it applies here but I saw a video where the native version of Minecraft ran slower than the emulated version… on a Switch!
If OP has a thrift store nearby it’s pretty likely they can get both for under $30.
I got a lot of use out of Google Translate for text.
Not sure if you want to label it as a “captcha alternative”. In most cases I’m sure the captcha is used because they want a real person looking at the page (and the ads on the page). In this case it seems more like a way to keep either bots or people from doing nothing but consuming content (or hacking) without giving back something of value. Either way I really like the idea.
Other ways, in theory, I think you could do this kind of thing are torrent ratios (e.g. hosting one or moreLinux ISOs), general archiving (e.g. you get asked to return a random range of bytes from a file you’re supposed to be backing up), you run a weather station that reports temperature to the National Weather Service. You might think about a more general framework for just verifying if user X has been contributing something of value.
I’ve never heard anyone explicitly say this but I’m sure a lot of people (i.e. management) think that AI is a replacement for static code. If you have a component with constantly changing requirements then it can make sense, but don’t ask an llm to perform a process that’s done every single day in the exact same way. Chief among my AI concerns is the amount of energy it uses. It feels like we could mostly wean off of carbon emitting fuels in 50 years but if energy demand skyrockets will be pushing those dates back by decades.
No. My connection is about as simple as it gets. I just downloaded and got the site to work immediately with Brave. I’m quite annoyed because I can never use Firefox for more than a day before I run into a site that doesn’t load.