That’s a valid argument, but a very weak one. If we are not completely sure something is an improvement in all aspects are we just to dismiss it altogether?
They’ve lost potential revenue, but that is not the same as if amazon would come to their house and had stolen their only rucksack prototype.
Potential revenue is not your property.
It still sucks though.
Can you expand on this wild claim? The whole point of containers is isolation so what you are saying is that containers fail at that all the time?
That’s cool, post a link here when you’re done, I want to see what you cook up.
Good, we have been in a drought of js frameworks lately: https://dayssincelastjsframework.com/
Joking aside, that’s your selling feature?
I use rathole for this purpose. Works great, minimal, great performance.
Well, lemmy is a place for much more cultured audience. We can appreciate a good shitpost (that does also hold some water).
This is an overstatement, definitely. C is one of the few (mainstream) languages where memory safety vulnerabilities are even possible. So if you batch C and C++ together, they probably cover more than 90% of all the memory unsafe cove written in last 50 years, which is a strong implication that they will contribute to 90% of memory vulnerabilities.
All that said, memory vulnerabilities are about 65% of all high implact vulnerabilities on Chromium project[1] and about 70% of vulnerabilities at Microsoft [2].
You are not alone. This is the work git was built for.
There is a bit of benefit if you have code reviewed so separate commits are easier to review instaed of one -900 +1278 commit.
My house was built in 1939. Initial installation of ecectric cables consisted of a wire in a sleeve filled over with concrete. That was all replaced with proper tubing and isolation, but these few outlets do not have ground.
Wait, but if you have, for example an HTTP API and you listen on a unix socket in for incoming requests, this is quite a lot of overhead in parsing HTTP headers. It is not much, but also cannot be the recommended solution on how to do network applications.
I use planka, which feels exactly like what trello used to feel: fast & simple. It does not have an app though.
Lol, something felt off, but I just wasn’t sure if I mistyped something until I saw this comment.
This is the real big-endian way. So your things line-up when you have all of these:
file_dialogue_open
file_dialogue_close
file_dropdown_open
file_rename
directory_remove
If I were designing a natural language, I’d put adjectives after the nouns, so you start with the important things first:
car big red
instead of
big red car
I’ve opened up the pricing page, and it seems it is much more expensive then their mainstream competitor Backblaze. For a terabyte of backup for a month, rsync.net would charge 1024*0.012 = 12$, while Backblaze would charge 6$. Hetzner Storage Box would be only 3.20$ (+better price scaling over terabytes).
What am I missing?
Sources:
Ok, so most of you also use normal PC processors for your setups. So my power usage is not that high in comparison.
But still, a RaspberryPI would use much less and would still be performant enough.
I recommend buying one of these things for finding this out: https://ae01.alicdn.com/kf/HTB1sJx0lrZnBKNjSZFGq6zt3FXao/EU-Plug-Digital-Voltage-Wattmeter-Power-Meter-Consumption-Watt-Energy-KWh-Socket-220V-230V-AC-Electricity.jpg
Aaah, AI training data. That makes sense now
Yeah, idk, ive never actually used win 11 and have barely used win 10. It just a meme.