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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)M
Posts
14
Comments
510
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I got shadowbanned by Reddit after nearly 20 years on the platform. No justification given. No response to appeal.

  • Because less than 1% of users would use it and your trusting the security of not one bit partner but thousands of ever-changing small partners.

    Also, email is already federated.

  • Though maybe the bike could detect the slow charging case and put a message on the screen.

  • I expect if more bikes charged via USB-C more people would be trying to charge them via phone chargers and wondering why they or slow.

    And would these e-bike chargers be able to safely charge a phone which needs less power? Because people would try that, too.

  • Yes. I used CVS when it was the best option. If I recall, CVS made it easy to check out a different version of only one fail, making it easy to put a system in an inconsistent state.

    For modern VCS that’s pleasant to learn and use but won’t scale to the Linux kernel, I recommend Darcs.

    A single binary, interactive commands and online help.

  • CVS does not even support atomic commits across four files.

  • You used CVS and it wasn’t a drugstore.

  • But you haven’t even heard the theories!

  • Xh is my favorite— a rewrite of httpie with some fixes.

  • None of the Mac web devs I know are talking about it. I’m not sure they have even heard of it.

  • 7” is a tablet.

  • The post suggests that Cloudflare is donating $100k to Omarchy, but no figure is given by Cloudflare. Cloudflare’s press release reads more services in kind for an open source project— something many tech firms already offer without a check on the politics of the maintainers first.

  • Needs a painting or a rug to really pull the room together.

  • I haven’t heard of that happening much outside of law enforcement raid.

    Laptops, yeah. But stories of homes being broken into to steal servers?

  • When was the last time you saw a headline: “Thieves steal home lab”?

  • Looks like rich people traveling around filming a mockumentary. 🥱

  • I think this will be clear to mobile users who have memorized what’s under the three dot menu vs the three line menu and the other three dot menu.

  • Translation collision where two words got the same translation?

  • The encoding format of URLs is URL encoding, also known as percent-encoding. Content in the URL may be first encoding in some other format, like JSON or base64, and then encoded additionally using percent-encoding.

    While there is a standard way to decode percent-encoding, websites are free to use base64 or JSON in URLs however they wish, so there's not a one-size-fits-all way to decode them all. For example, the "/" character is valid in both percent-encoding and base64-encoding, so to know if it's part of a base64-encoded blob or not, you might end up trying decoding several parts of the URL as base64 and checking if the result looks like URL-- essentially brute force.

    A smarter way to do this might be to maintain a mapping between your favorite sites that you want to decode and what methods they use to encode links. Then a tool could efficiently directly decode the URLs embedded in these click trackers.