This time it's Mozilla. They apparently forgot to regenerate some certificates used in signing add-ons and they all stopped working.
https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/bkfte9/if_you_have_issues_with_your_addons_being_marked/
This time it's Mozilla. They apparently forgot to regenerate some certificates used in signing add-ons and they all stopped working.
https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/bkfte9/if_you_have_issues_with_your_addons_being_marked/
So our company procured, after years of selection and testing, a tool to manage shared passwords (where a team needs access to systems that cannot be easily connected to the federated authentication). So I tried to add the secrets for the service principal and the technical user in there and
⸘Warum, kurwa‽
… the “password” in this case is a “client secret” and is (hopefully) randomly generated by the Azure API, so I can't choose whether it will start with a digit or not.
PS: Note the bonus Engrish.
@Polygeekery I doubt you'll make friends that way, because:
@sh_code It's not JavaScript that's kidding you:
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/time.h.html:
The <time.h> header shall declare the tm structure, which shall include at least the following members:
int tm_sec Seconds [0,60].
int tm_min Minutes [0,59].
int tm_hour Hour [0,23].
int tm_mday Day of month [1,31].
int tm_mon Month of year [0,11].
int tm_year Years since 1900.
int tm_wday Day of week [0,6] (Sunday =0).
int tm_yday Day of year [0,365].
int tm_isdst Daylight Savings flag.
Javascript just passes those values on.
I would, however, grant you that the getDate
for day and getDay
for day-of-week is somewhat silly.
@obeselymorbid Healthy Living hasn't been available in most of the world for almost two years now
I just got
from GitHub.
How on $planet does GitHub suddenly decide that an account that exists for some years, has repositories, has comments in many bug reports that are not being marked as spam, has integrated merge requests and is member of two organizations is not a human?
@PleegWat said in The Cat Status Thread:
Mine is working on a campaign to slip into the bedroom and stay there for more than 10 seconds.
That's just his firm belief that if you are not letting him somewhere, you are hiding something from him and he wants to investigate what. Most cats have that belief.
Consequently, I suspect he's plotting to kill me in my sleep.
I'm sure he does not. Cats do enjoy the free meals and warm homes they get from their humans. Rather he's probably plotting to wake you up at three in the morning by trying to play with your feet, or hands, or nose, because you've been sleeping too long and it's time for some fun.
@Gurth No. Subtitled versions also exist. As do the subtitles for the dubbed version, this time for the benefit of the deaf. And digital TV can even stream both audio streams and you can often choose which one you want.
Also I never said that there can't be any other version than dubbed. The question was why dub it, and that's what I answered.
the voice command can be simply dubbed along with all the rest of the dialogue.
Um … WTF would you dub dialogue instead of subtitling it?
For the dyslexic among us. People with even very mild dyslexia can't follow the movie if they have to read the subtitles.
About the only thing worse is the eastern European narrator-style “translation.”
We has some of that “simultaneous translation” in the early '90s, but generally Czechia has very good dubbing studios when the production cares to pay for the job, and Star Trek was dubbed well here.
@BernieTheBernie said in Aviation Antipatterns Thread:
And you do not even need the new-fangled 737-MAX. The old 737-800 brand will do, too:
This is probably a spotlight bias. A panel falls from a some plane, of any type, now and then, usually because maintenance didn't close it properly or because some screws rusted through. It is not particularly dangerous, since these access panels don't have a structural function. But after that door plug, which was a serious incident, and the quality control issues it revealed, any incident involving Boeing aircraft is now much more likely to make mainstream news.
the Star Trek computer, something that could respond to natural language queries
… the main reason the computers responded to voice commands and gave voice responses was that it was the easy way to show what the characters are doing with the computer in a film. A cut to a screen would be a lot harder to design, and then would need subtitles when translating, while the voice command can be simply dubbed along with all the rest of the dialogue. Note that when the characters is told what to do instead, they always just run their fingers across the keyboard/terminal instead—because we viewers already know what's going on.
We have it now, sort of, but because UIs don't directly make money it's been shuffled to the side where it's used to set timers and makes humans yell "OPERATOR" at their phones to try to get to talk to an actual person. :(
Because in the meantime people who work with computers a lot got used to keyboard and mouse, and found them to be fast and accurate, so the voice control isn't being an advantage. While the less tech savvy people, who find keyboards and touch-screens hard, appreciate it, even if they only need simple things like setting an alarm and choosing a person to dial. Plus the simple cases were easier to get working sufficiently reliably.
@Benjamin-Hall said in WTF Bites:
TFA said:
Finally, GnuCOBOL will be one of the languages featured in the upcoming Google Summer of Code, so a whole new generation of coders will be able to say “It’s not just COBOL. It’s GnuCOBOL.”
You see, sooner or later, everything old is GNU again.
@Zerosquare … because it's not a yes/no question.
@sockpuppet7 said in TIL (about the Dark Arts of HTML):
@Watson said in TIL (about the Dark Arts of HTML):
@Bulb said in TIL (about the Dark Arts of HTML):
But does it have actual semantic significance? That is, is there an application that, upon seeing application/epub+zip will say that it has no clue what epub is, but it does know what a zip is, so it will offer the user to open it as a zip archive?
Also, how do you reduce image/svg+xml to application/xml without already knowing that format?I guess the closest thing there is for that is RFC6838: you're not supposed to use a +suffix unless the suffix itself is already declared as a media type. Dunno how rigorous IANA is about rejecting applications to register
example/something+xml
for something that isn't actually XML, but there'd probably at least be discussion.what stops me from writing whatever on my mime headers?
Nothing, but you usually want to set something that will make the client behave the way you want. Which sometimes requires setting something that makes no sense, see above.
@The_Quiet_One said in 😻 The Emergency Cute Things Thread:
a can of tuna
Tuna specifically might be addictive for cats.