Linux assholes are actually the only folks who have created a filesystem where it's guaranteed all operations are reversible, including modifying contents and deleting - NILFS.
Also the only filesystem that sounds like a porn category.
Linux assholes are actually the only folks who have created a filesystem where it's guaranteed all operations are reversible, including modifying contents and deleting - NILFS.
Also the only filesystem that sounds like a porn category.
Did you know that what.thedailywtf.com forum has fifty different words for 'cupcake'?
So, the is Mozilla wants the Web to be more secure? Because that sounds like a good thing to me...
Remember the old adage about how to make a system more secure: Disconnected from the network, powered off, and locked in a concrete box, with the key inside.
Yes, it would be "more secure". But does it outweigh the costs?
Fun fact: my home router's configuration page is at http://192.168.1.254/. There is no way the manufacturer is going to get a certificate for 192.168.1.254.
... the phone's paltry 1GB of memory ...
wat? That ls literally 4 times what you could expect on Windows XP.
- You can find four-space indents and two-space indents mixed in the same file;
- You can find function definitions with the function keyword and without in the same file;
- You can find 167-character-long lines mixed with early-broken lines (yes, sometimes in the same file);
- You can find completely commented out blocks of code in the core lib, where the average user is not supposed to touch;
I'm fairly sure none of those four things cause code to break. Sure, they make it easier for programmers to break the code, but they don't actually break the code themselves.
Impossible. They were using HTTPS, that means they were perfectly secure. And if you say otherwise you're a NSA sympathizer.
What you need to do is tell one of your bosses/clients/whoever the month that you'll be migrating, and another one the date, and write down some possibilities on a piece of paper. By the time they figure it out, you will have performed the migration.
You missed the part where you get them to argue over whether the Windows 8 logo is blue and white, or black and gold.
@JazzyJosh said:generally all forms of insurance, in real life as well, cost money up front.Getting scrap value from your trash isn't even insurance though. IRL, you just drag it to the scrap yard and have it weighed.
Not if it's in exploded into millions of pieces in enemy territory.
My hiring algo is quite simple:return girl && girl.isHot(); ```</blockquote> In what language do booleans have an `isHot()` method? And why are you interested in only hiring booleans you shot anyway?
I'm talking about underlying causes, clearly.NeedsAccurateICache=1</blockquote>
If only programming was that easy. We could just write:
NeedsAccurateEmulator=1
and have an emulator that runs every game flawlessly!
Isn't that the general direction the entire industry is moving in? Move fast and break things. Release unfinished buggy crap early and often. Redesign things every few years so it looks shiny. Make sure that using two of your products together is more seamless than using your product with a competitor's product. Move everything possible online. And so on.
Bicycle: two cycles
Semicircle: half a circle
An annual event: the interval between events is one year
A biannual event: the interval between events is two years
A semiannual event: the interval between events is half a year
That has the unfortunately confusing side effect that a biannual event happens 0.5 times per year, and a semiannual event happens twice a year.
Did nobody else see the title and expect this to be about the Chinese DDoS?
How can you trust anyone's code to work at all?
This is typical of everything deployed to market at any point in history. Get
it to work, get it shipped to beat your competitors, and then patch the
problems (including security holes) later. Maybe.
FTFY
GitHub seems to have disabled a repository for a piece of software called "WebM for Retards". (The user page still shows the repository description)
Discuss.
```
$ trash-restore
0 2015-04-15 15:20:17 /home/kane/Documents/taxes/
1 2015-04-19 00:00:01 /home/kane/tmp/delete-me
What file to restore [0..4]:What happens if you type 2, 3 or 4?
Semantic simplicity: a set operation is always a set operation and always behaves exactly the same way regardless of argument, even if the argument is of type undefined or even a literal undefinedWorks this way in Lua too.
No, it actually doesn't. Tell me, will this print anything or not when called?
function doStuff(k, v)
local t = {}
t[k] = v
for k2, v2 in pairs(t) do
print(k2, v2)
end
end
Answer: It will print the passed key and value only if the value is not nil. By contrast, the JavaScript equivalent would always print the passed key and value.
I think the title speaks for itself, really.
This was my thought. When they deprecate it, presumably they'll start warning users about going to http sites. This will finally kill their browser.
Until Google does the same thing.
Microsoft's browser team seem to be less insane (for example, they're planning to support HTTP-2-without-TLS) so I'd expect them to keep supporting HTTP-1-without-TLS.
Edit: WTF Discourse? I tried to reply to two posts and my first reply got deleted. It was something about how http://httpvshttps.com/ compares HTTP 1 and HTTP 2, which has nothing whatsoever to do with TLS, except that it's a convenient way for Mozilla and Google to push it by confusing people into thinking it makes their connections faster.
Something that would be more reasonable would be boolean feature flags to turn on and off hacks that work for multiple games, along with more accurate emulation reducing the need for "skipping drawcalls".
Game-specific hacks are for making games work before they figure out how to emulate them 100% correctly. Hence the name.
And how many of these apply to more than one game?
That's what net stop "windows update"
(or the services GUI) is for.
Don't worry, they'll probably disable that ability in a few updates. Evergreen all the computers!
Someone please say this also applies to Google crapware on Samsung phones.
(by the way, why does some sites insist to redirect to HTTPS? I want to watch a publicly available video, why does the connection need to be encrypted?)
Because the NSA are probably noting the fact that you requested that video, and are using it to improve their estimated likelihood of you being a terrorist, dissident, or "radicalized American".
Flash in general is meh. Twitch's Flash player in particular, however, is completely horrible, and it's a good thing they're replacing it (with anything else at all).