Funnily enough, to me these aphorisms (?) sound almost like the replicant test in Blaze Runner. Like these are the unit bit of "nudging"
Only half-joking: maybe Java was a mistake. I feel like so much was lost in programming language development because of OOP...
As long as you don't keep switching the DC current on and off, which is what computers are all about
Yeah, perhaps. One I remember from last year is the cryptography and numpy package, for instance. Now they do seem to ship with binary wheels, at least for my current Python and Linux version. Kerberos and Hadoop stuff…
They all come as wheels, they just aren't precompiled.
Honestly I don't think I've ever used a precompiled package in Python. Every single C stuff seems to take ages and requires all that fun stuff of installing native system dependencies. Edit: skimming through this page,…
I thought so too until I got to interact with databases and Big Data tools written in Java. God, what a mess that requires so much upkeeping, more dependency problems than I remember from C++ and probably some orders of…
Is that an advantage? At the very least, what it entails is that losing your private key is game over.
I mean, that sucks, but honestly she's not a ~digital influencer~. So I don't think her views matter that much.
That's not the point...
I was watching a video about nesting in CSS and how it's just in Chrome and comments were all about how cool it is and how they can't wait to use it, and so on, and so forth. I think it's quite a representative example:…
Yeah, financial and social pressure is basically the only weapons we have against corporations when regulations don't exist. And honestly, financial pressure doesn't work at this scale or in this case.
They literally already store the whole conversation...
I have 4 banking apps and about 8 government apps in my phone. All of them require device attestation. I have no doubt they will use the Web Integrity API as well.
Even if they don't, a lot of websites are just breaking on Firefox. The development community decided they want a Chrome monoculture.
Do you know how rooting Android is basically useless nowadays? Most banking and government apps, at least in my country, don't work if Google didn't give the seal of approval for your system. I take it you see as good…
Nah, scientific papers are supposed to be precise and technical. This reads like those quite frequent suggestions here of switching all equations in papers to plain English or code: it honestly comes from a place of…
Yeah, I'm interested in knowing how people manage it. With Redis, I usually put the Lua code within the same repo and embed the Lua code within the deployment artifact, so it gets tested and deployed together with the…
Yeah, I find it funny to see technologists being surprised that in most cases judges won't mind that the signature wasn't done with quantum-resistent cryptography stored in a blockchain or whatever. Technical solutions…
The common thread is these are utilities, not VC-backed start-ups wanting to dominate the world.
If the Future, Executor, Optional, Streams, etc played nice with checked exceptions it would probably be different. Right now at some point you do have to wrap it into an unchecked exception.
Isn't it how it works right now with Excel? Pretty sure every company relies on a obscure spreadsheet that no one knows how to maintain
Probably I had already heard it in a longer version but wow, summing it up like that really hits home.
Ironically for crypto bros, I think the way forward will be to codify the real-world trust structures into the digital world. The future is trustful. I just really hope we find a way to codify it without scanning…
Honestly, when we're discussing with humans we want the humans' response. Anyone of us can ask ChatGPT, I don't know why people keep pasting its answers
Funnily enough, to me these aphorisms (?) sound almost like the replicant test in Blaze Runner. Like these are the unit bit of "nudging"
Only half-joking: maybe Java was a mistake. I feel like so much was lost in programming language development because of OOP...
As long as you don't keep switching the DC current on and off, which is what computers are all about
Yeah, perhaps. One I remember from last year is the cryptography and numpy package, for instance. Now they do seem to ship with binary wheels, at least for my current Python and Linux version. Kerberos and Hadoop stuff…
They all come as wheels, they just aren't precompiled.
Honestly I don't think I've ever used a precompiled package in Python. Every single C stuff seems to take ages and requires all that fun stuff of installing native system dependencies. Edit: skimming through this page,…
I thought so too until I got to interact with databases and Big Data tools written in Java. God, what a mess that requires so much upkeeping, more dependency problems than I remember from C++ and probably some orders of…
Is that an advantage? At the very least, what it entails is that losing your private key is game over.
I mean, that sucks, but honestly she's not a ~digital influencer~. So I don't think her views matter that much.
That's not the point...
I was watching a video about nesting in CSS and how it's just in Chrome and comments were all about how cool it is and how they can't wait to use it, and so on, and so forth. I think it's quite a representative example:…
Yeah, financial and social pressure is basically the only weapons we have against corporations when regulations don't exist. And honestly, financial pressure doesn't work at this scale or in this case.
They literally already store the whole conversation...
I have 4 banking apps and about 8 government apps in my phone. All of them require device attestation. I have no doubt they will use the Web Integrity API as well.
Even if they don't, a lot of websites are just breaking on Firefox. The development community decided they want a Chrome monoculture.
Do you know how rooting Android is basically useless nowadays? Most banking and government apps, at least in my country, don't work if Google didn't give the seal of approval for your system. I take it you see as good…
Nah, scientific papers are supposed to be precise and technical. This reads like those quite frequent suggestions here of switching all equations in papers to plain English or code: it honestly comes from a place of…
Yeah, I'm interested in knowing how people manage it. With Redis, I usually put the Lua code within the same repo and embed the Lua code within the deployment artifact, so it gets tested and deployed together with the…
Yeah, I find it funny to see technologists being surprised that in most cases judges won't mind that the signature wasn't done with quantum-resistent cryptography stored in a blockchain or whatever. Technical solutions…
The common thread is these are utilities, not VC-backed start-ups wanting to dominate the world.
If the Future, Executor, Optional, Streams, etc played nice with checked exceptions it would probably be different. Right now at some point you do have to wrap it into an unchecked exception.
Isn't it how it works right now with Excel? Pretty sure every company relies on a obscure spreadsheet that no one knows how to maintain
Probably I had already heard it in a longer version but wow, summing it up like that really hits home.
Ironically for crypto bros, I think the way forward will be to codify the real-world trust structures into the digital world. The future is trustful. I just really hope we find a way to codify it without scanning…
Honestly, when we're discussing with humans we want the humans' response. Anyone of us can ask ChatGPT, I don't know why people keep pasting its answers