Recommend cloudflare for DNS. I use it for DDNS via API and it works great.
You also basically pay the wholesale rate without markup for the domain.
Aka csm10495 on kbin.social
Recommend cloudflare for DNS. I use it for DDNS via API and it works great.
You also basically pay the wholesale rate without markup for the domain.
+1 to NPM. Works really easily for certs and auto renewal.
modprobe this
Could be twice if it’s a 12 hour clock and doesn’t mark am/pm.
This isn’t really accurate for either side. For Linux, I’ve had crap shove configs in ~, /etc, /var, at least.
On Windows, it could be literally anywhere or in the registry.
… effortless casting could be a negative depending on who ya ask.
Exactly the same boat. But man Cloudflare is better in every way. Having an API to update/fetch records for a zone does wonders.
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I like htop
They injected some binary code to make a code object (and in doing so inject some obfuscation)… if someone wants to violate the new license, they can easily work around it via installing through pip, commenting out that license check… Not that I endorse library license violations.
I put up packages on pypi with the last LGPL code versions for my own usage. I don’t plan on updating them much, but they work for me.
PySimpleGUI-4-foss And psgtray-foss.
That’s incorrect in that you have to remove the contributions from source code or get permission. Rewriting git history doesn’t get permission or remove history. It just hides it.
This is so sad. I’m especially bothered about the force push to change history. This was a great library. Now I guess it’s time to either use the fork or find something else.
That can’t remove a directory.
Imagine the regex needed to highlight code with that extra single quote.
LinkedIn has over a billion users. I got a t-shirt for it.
Sweet I updated and broke my package manager and the system python. I guess I’ll just reimage and start over.
:shrugs:
In theory you could generate a wildcard to a domain then use it.
Yep. Was C++.
This is kind of nonsensical. I used to have to build code on Ubuntu 10.04 so that it would work on 10.04. if I tried to build on 18.04 I would get glibc errors. (Yes I know it was too old, but marketing insisted we support it).
I can still target Windows XP for builds on Windows 10 today.
This is true on one hand, but on the other hand, the businesses still using Ubuntu 10.04 with its original kernel would like a word.