Sounds to me like this is a workaround so that Google can maintain control over who gets to release apps now that they can't do it by locking the apps behind Google Play. I wouldn't be surprised if being verified also includes some kind of fee.
Leclair also faces eight charges from the incident, ranging from dangerous driving, possession of drugs for the purpose of trafficking, failure to comply with a demand for a breath sample, and flight from a peace officer.
Canada has a lot to offer and to gain from being part of the Eurostack initiative.
I think The Conversation just wrapped news about Eurostack in Canada wrapping paper to get views.
Canada can't be a part of Eurostack; its goal is bring everything (tech) in-house. Aside investing capital so Eurostack can hit its lofty 300 billion euro goal in 10 years, I dont see what Canada can offer or gain from this. If the "gain" is that we stop Canadian dependence on US tech, we'd just be swapping one overlord for another.
Yes, of course we could reduce our dependence on US tech, but Canada should be stealing this page from Europe's playbook and making their ownEuro Canstack
I don't see these people, especially after the context in the video, as reliable sources. I remain skeptical about these calls. Don't get me wrong, PP sucks, but Rachel should have done a little more "fact-checking"
If you are looking to do something like Github's Personal Access Tokens (PAT) then it is easiest to just think about it like a password:
Create a high entropy (secure) string
Store the hash of the string in a database table
Store the permissions and other metadata with the PAT's hash
Validate the PAT (permissions, revoke status, etc) on each request to the server
Storing the hash of the token, like you do with passwords, is a good practice in case your db is ever compromised as it wont leave the tokens accessible and reusable without a lot of effort.
You will speak the version that you learned. You will mostly notice regional differences in the idioms and synonyms of the words you know might be used more commonly in one region vs the other.
For example, in London you might hear people use boot instead of trunk.
But the majority of the words will be the same regardless of region.
I thought of Crysis also when I read the title. But first, I'm down for Quake and more specifically QuakeTF (team fortress). I spent way too much of my youth playing quake and qtf (honorable mention to UTF).
Tux Guitar comes to mind but some things like chord diagrams isn't done as well as guitar pro (imo).
For chord diagrams (like at the top of GP), there's hundreds of websites out there which show those and its probably quicker to just use those. I'll usually just search "C chord
The answer depends on the country. In the US, review the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering (AML) regulations. In Canada, there is the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA) regulations and also the CRA requiring the individuals and businesses retain their records for up to six years.
if there’s some sort of way around this either with a lawyer or federal form or something.