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Perfect. This is consistent with what I was thinking and that Cloudflare’s changes won’t fix any recent bundles that might include malicious code.
Perfect. This is consistent with what I was thinking and that Cloudflare’s changes won’t fix any recent bundles that might include malicious code.
Somehow I think Islam is the bigger problem. I think they don’t take the Satanic Temple as seriously. 😂
I read the story and specifically the bit about the Github account. Isn’t this the Polyfill lib’s Github account? Because if that’s the case, how would a bundler solve the issue? The new owners could modify the original source, then the CICD jobs would happily publish that to registries and from there down into the bundles. Is it a different Github account they’re talking about?
This is how you get Christians to lobby for no religion in schools.
Now if there’s an imam to step forward, we could really accelerate this process.
Nice. Unfortunately this won’t tackle the mountains of sites that use bundlers.
“at the expense of economic and social sustainability, [but] defending and promoting European production and safeguarding tens of thousands of jobs.”
I mean, she’s right in general that the EU might not be taking care of the workers of the affected industries. But that doesn’t mean the way to take care of them is to halt the transition of the worst offending sectors. There’s no reason not to super subsidize the auto sector transition to make EVs in the EU other than ideology. The transition doesn’t mean dependence on Chinese EVs and jobless or downskilled auto workers.
Crashes aren’t normal even in Windows. Rare crashes mean a hardware problem 99.7% of the time. Typically RAM as others have pointed out. The only way to figure that out is 4 passes of Memtest86+ without red. Yes 4 because the the first pass is a short one made to spot obviously bad RAM quickly. Less bad RAM might need more. I’ve had a case of 4 sticks that each pass on its own. Every two passed on their own. All 4 failed on the third or fourth pass. And if you think I tested for shits and giggles, I did not. I was see checksum errors on my ZFS pool every other day. No crashes. Nevertheless, if it wasn’t for ZFS I’d have corrupted files all over my archive.
No mass ID leak article would be complete without an ad for another online entity that requires ID submissions.
Well their job is to keep the line from going down so… They seem to be doing their job.
Because Ubuntu LTS works very reliably and because there’s a huge body of information and large swathes of people who can help on the Internet, and because every project and vendor tests and releases their stuff for Ubuntu/Debian and has documentation for it.
Despite the hate you see around these shores, Ubuntu LTS is among the best if not the best beginner distro. Importantly it scales to any other proficiency level. The skill and knowledge acquired while learning Ubuntu transfers to Debian as well as working professionally with either of them.
Also, with the fuckery RedHat pulls lately, it’s a disservice to new users to get them to learn the RedHat ecosystem, unless they plan or need to use it professionally. If I had to bet, I’d bet that the RH ecosystem would be all but deserted by volunteers in the years to come. I bet that as we speak a whole lotta folks donating their time are coming to the conclusion that Debian was right and are abandoning ship.
I’d like to put Simona’s mind at ease because economics research into the relationship between wages and productivity shows a casual link where higher wages increase productivity. That is, higher wages force firms to invest in technology, equipment and training in order to offset the increased labor cost.
It’s the same problem with every other monopoly. Everyone wants it, both shareholders and customers. It’s objectively more efficient to standardize on the same equipment or software, train workers on it. It’s better for workers too since their skills are transferrable. It’s only bad when the negatives show up, such as price gouging by the shareholders, or them cutting corners in quality or security. But my point is that not going with a single vendor isn’t free on all sides of the equation, it requires work, which is why on average we tend to prefer monopolies even as consumers.
To put it bluntly, I really don’t want to have to think about grocers profit margins and prices after having worked 9 hours. I just want to get fucking eggs and bread from the store nearby. I don’t want to drive or bus ride to another one. It won’t happen. And that’s why it doesn’t. The assumptions about the individual (constantly shopping around for the best price) in the mainstream microeconomic theory are just wrong. This translates into small businesses (not only) shopping for their dealer sales software system.
Well this is nice. One downside is that folks who play games without VSync can’t turn it off in Wayland as far as I’m aware.
I think you mean Xorg instead of X11.
I’m serious. Politics are a good chunk of the job, meetings is a major place for that. What happens there can have dramatic effects on how long something takes and therefore on the “produced output per unit of time.” I’ve been at it for 13 years now and embracing that has had positive results on my well-being and career. 🥹
Meetings are part of the productive time.
California employs some health care workers, and it also pays for medical benefits through the state’s Medicaid program.
Interesting.
Interesting. The article talks about more regional freedom on spending taxes and rendering services. How about tax collection? If tax collection is unchanged, then there should still be equalising wealth transfers across regions.
They can certainly slow down the proliferation this way, a lot. They can’t gatekeep it forever from a determined third party though.
It sucks that we’re unlikely to get a vaccine targeting a difficult to change part of the virus by the established mRNA makers. We would probably need a new entity to do it.