Yes, UI tests are very hard to maintain on Android so I always pull and run the code to check the actual behavior. As said by others compilation and linting are done by the CI.
Totally agree, anything with a (big) firmware or mass storage looks like a better device to compromise.
My yubikeys were sent in an envelope identifying its content, I thought it wasn't a smart move at the time :/.
Exactly, started university in Paris in 2004 and OCaml was used to teach data structures for instance. First year was Scheme and C, second year had Java, OCaml, more C, some C++ if you wanted and Mips. Third year added…
Yes, UI tests are very hard to maintain on Android so I always pull and run the code to check the actual behavior. As said by others compilation and linting are done by the CI.
Totally agree, anything with a (big) firmware or mass storage looks like a better device to compromise.
My yubikeys were sent in an envelope identifying its content, I thought it wasn't a smart move at the time :/.
Exactly, started university in Paris in 2004 and OCaml was used to teach data structures for instance. First year was Scheme and C, second year had Java, OCaml, more C, some C++ if you wanted and Mips. Third year added…