I believe he was comparing it to a similar broadband grant in a comidic fashion
I believe he was comparing it to a similar broadband grant in a comidic fashion
It doesn’t necessarily mean that. It could also be that they attempt to block the rise of new platforms, and by doing so limiting the amount of platforms that they have to compromise.
Same
Would’ve never expected this read to be so interesting.
Where’s the docstring?
Wdym? Are devs not functional?
Twitter’s rate limit changes have led to the death of third-party apps like Apollo
Apollo?
Twitter implemented a rate limit to manage their infrastructure migration to Raspberry Pi
Raspberry pi?
Elon Musk is supposedly fighting against the CIA and NSA, who are using Twitter for censorship
Wha…?
Regarding section 1, won’t you still get the conflicts when pushing to remote (or pulling from it)?
I now noticed that the post’s content differs between instances, sorry about that.
I could be wrong. I’d be happy to be shown wrong. Always room to learn.
Generally when I hear cyber security I think of things like data breaches, vulnerability research, malware analysis, netsec, appsec… Stuff like that.
I’m actually not really sure where I’d have posted. I remember seeing a meta community somewhere, maybe lemmy.world, where you can have discussions about Lemmy. But I’m really not sure.
And just to make it clear, I’m just giving you my honest opinion. Not trying to make you feel bad or anything.
How is is this cyber security related?
And it’s not P2P…
Jami is p2p for example. Direct communication between peers.
That’s not being pretentious, that’s being blunt. I personally as a dev, appreciate that.
If you think the code can be improved you should say that, and exactly why that’s the case. When you’re mistaken you should be able to take the criticism.
Your mission as a dev is to write the ideal code, and being overly polite can stand in the way of that.
He was probably working with bytes and not individual bits, but yeah. He basically wrote executables directly (to my understanding).
I don’t think he does. If you’re talking about the third line, there’s a space between the dots.
The dot command is equivalent to source
(running the script in the context of the current shell).
Point it out explicitly in your resume. Don’t expect them to figure out your github activity on their own.
It’s definitely better to have open source experience than no experience.