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:
@Bulb And now print the directory listing, put the paper onto a wooden table, take a polaroid photograph, scan it, ...
I had some reason to think internally the function äpp service also implements the timer triggers as http triggers called from some scheduler service.
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
I need a "Timmer Trigger", so I guess Asp.Net won't help here.
Actually we have a service in the internal app that does—actually, used to do—just that. It is written in asp.net and executed as a container workload. The timer didn't want to start automatically, but it does when any request is made against the service, so we used the standard kubernetes support for health-checks to make sure it starts.
The service was since modified so that there is a Logic Äpp (that's the “codeless” kind you just assemble in the portal from components) set to run on schedule that just triggers the http endpoint of the service.
@BernieTheBernie said in Azure bites:
.Net 8 LTS. It references a project targeted to .Net 4.8
Nothing specific to Azure here. .нет 4.8 is .нет framework, while .нет 8.0 is .нет core. .нет core dropped a bunch of components that were windows-specific for sake of making it portable to other platforms. So yeah, нет gonna work.
Microsoft really messed up .нет versioning—and backward compatibility. Though they kinda cornered themselves by making System.Windows
part of the standard library in the first place.
Also by implementing it new in .нет 8, you are already using the dotnet-isolated
runtime (supported from .нет 6) and evaded the porting from the dotnet
runtime (supported up to .нет 6). That upgrade basically means huge search&replace of everything, because the annotations and the injected types are in different packages and most of them called differently. You also need to add the entry point (for dotnet
runtime you uploaded a .dll
, now you upload an .exe
).
The bindings make Function Äpps slightly faster to write than writing a normal ASP.NET web app, but after seeing it a couple of times I'd choose the web app—the Äpp Service is similar to the Function Äpps, and runs on the same Service Plan, but because it runs any HTTP service, it is not tied to a specific SDK (you can even deploy it as a container if the runtimes they provide don't suite you).
@PleegWat said in Programming Memes Thread:
And confluence's search is barely better than nothing at all.
QFFT. And OneNote's¹ search ain't no better.
¹ This guy that got hired here as an architect isn't dumb, but he knows too much Microsoft stuff and too little other, so he pushes Microsoft stuff everywhere. That said, it does have one advantage over the Confluence we have—OMS365 is hosted by Microsoft, so it documents in sharepoint can be shared with externals easily, while the Confluence instance is still in the intranet, so that can't be.
@PleegWat said in Bad choice of font:
@Arantor said in Bad choice of font:
There’s some bad ligatures attached to that for sure.
I rather think there aren't and that's the problem. Checking the site, it looks like all connectors are in the same vertical position, while in real cursive the position of the connector very much depends on which letters are being connected.
Even that wouldn't be that much of a problem if they chose a higher point for the connection—which they totally could, because the stroke for each minuscule cursive letter starts raising to the median (top of the low letters) except for e, which starts with the horizontal stroke midway between the baseline and median. So if they let the trailing connection raise that high, the difference between a, with the stroke going all the way to baseline before raising up again and o with the connector just descending from the median, would be clear enough.
Looking again, the real problem is that the design of o is just plain wrong. The connection should start with a little loop at the top of the letter and lead down from there (before turning up into the next letter).
@Zecc said in Bad choice of font:
Bad choice of 'o' design
That simply ain't no o, cursive o connects from the top of the loop.
@boomzilla said in Aviation Antipatterns Thread:
Dammit Boeing!
The Airbus A330neo carrying 260 passengers and 13 crew members departed Salt Lake City for Amsterdam and had reached the Montana-North Dakota boundary before safely returning to Salt Lake City as one of the engine pylon panels had fallen off on takeoff, the Associated Press (AP) reported.
Oh, fuck.
@Bulb said in Aviation Antipatterns Thread:
A panel falls from a some plane, of any type, now and then
The Daily Caller could care a bit more and use an image of the correct aircraft though. The article image is a B737, not an A330.
@remi said in Driving Anti-Patterns - Necro Edition:
The other truck looks... "interesting" as well.
How the fuck is that even legal (or maybe it isn't, just no policeman noticed it yet)?
@HardwareGeek said in In other news today...:
@Bulb said in In other news today...:
the ship's engine never turned back on.
The video shows heavy black smoke pouring from the ship's funnel. It's possible the engine was running too poorly to develop any useful power, but it seems to be way too much smoke to be from just an emergency generator.
The most recent video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DoPRz7wk3WY
suggests it might be the starter (driving compressed air through the engine) trying to restart it. Since it continues to smoke, it probably didn't mange to.
@topspin Not sure, but it's definitely memorable enough that I remember it 26 years later.