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?
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
And from the VirtualBox machine, I cannot access my cloudy serverless SqlServer because of its network security configuration (could change that, but it would also cost an IP address).
Why would it cost an IP address? The cloudy serverless sql server can be open from internet without buying a separate IP address. And if you enable AD/Entra authentication only, I wouldn't even worry about no or loose firewall much.
@Medinoc I thought nw.js was using system-provided webview library instead of lugging Chromium around like Electron, but now I see it is not the case and it does lug Chromium around.
There is yet another, newer, such tool that does use system-provided webview, https://tauri.app/.
@Zerosquare Does a horse shit on the road?
@HardwareGeek I would add that the hold appears to double as a procedure turn to align with the approach course in this case, that is any aircraft arriving from that direction has to enter the hold anyway. That might be the reason the controller expected the pilots to expect it.
@Gurth said in Quotes Out of Context:
Not weird, cultural differences. Asphalt in this country is for roads that see a good deal of traffic — I can’t think of ever having seen a residential area with asphalt on the street, except when I was on holiday in the UK. Pretty much every street is paved with bricks in this country.
Cultural differences indeed, but I'd say asphalt (tarmac) is more common, because it's easier to lay down. Bricks/tiles look better, of course.
@BernieTheBernie “Infrastructure-as-Code” works with things that are at least somewhat designed for it, which is very much not the case of traditional operating systems, and especially of Windows. Linux at least had package managers for over 30 years and recent-ish-ly got the cloud-init for specifying what to install and configure on first start (the documentation is a bit thick, but once you sort out how the snippets fit together, it works reasonably well). But Windows have … complicated tools involving Active Directory and Group Policies.
Or, on Azure, you can provide a powershell script to run on first boot of the VM. Which behaves a bit weird—notably Invoke-WebRequest
fails without the -UseBasicParsing
option because it runs before the Infernet Exploder libraries are initialized or something—and is total pain in the arse to debug.
… at least Chocolatey has been a thing for a while for installing software on Windows, but I am not sure it would run from the startup script due to the abovementioned quirk.
@sebastian-galczynski said in WTF Bites:
This is how everyone does it in the current year
Not everyone. We don't. We stick to one service backing the API and one data pump for each external system.
@sebastian-galczynski said in WTF Bites:
It's easier to hire JS developers
Whether it's implemented in node.js is orthogonal to how it's split into separate services.
@sebastian-galczynski said in WTF Bites:
most of the time they're fighting with the toolchain or downloading new frameworks
That is, unfortunately, the reality of modern software development in all toolchains and frameworks, especially if you go where you have limited control over when the other components upgrade.
@Benjamin-Hall said in WTF Bites:
Microservices suck to work with IMX. And the more micro, the worse. I don't mind having several services for different things, but if it takes more than about 2 services to handle a request, yuck.
Microservices are a tool for decoupling things. Having one service back the UI and another for a background data pump or data transform makes sense, as does having a separate service for the admin interface, because then the normal one can have fewer permissions. But if splitting something will leave it tightly coupled, it generally shouldn't be split.
Also if something is tightly coupled, it almost certainly should be built from code in the same repository even if it produces a separate binary that runs separately. Exactly to avoid branch mismatch.
"STOP, STOP STOP!!" Recent FAA Air Traffic Control Errors Reviewed. – 20:36
— blancolirio
… ATC is sure messing up more and more often. Especially the first incident mentioned, from JFK, where the intrusion was only spotted by the Swiss 17K crew, was really bad.
@LaoC What? They went to Swindlestock tavern and were surprised to get swindled?
Filed under: cheap shot