Based on your phrasing it sounds like you think owning a national ID card is commonplace in Sweden. The national ID card system isn't widely used at all, most people use either their drivers license or passport when…
The newer ones don't have the color coding anymore, they're all just black, and the always-on ones have an additional symbol under the SS<USB> symbol.
A lot of JavaScript things have been buggy for me with encrypted.google.com as well. For example the Google timer cards and such often just won't start at all, while they'll work fine on the regular google.com.
Nomad is mentioned in the article, so they hardly forgot about it.
> But having another XML dialect that's not actual XML… HTML is based on SGML, it was never an XML dialect.
Regarding tags, https://github.com/cgwalters/git-evtag seems like a really interesting idea.
Non-conformant? PEP-394 says that scripts should only use python in the shebang if it's compatible with both py2 and py3, and be updated to work with both, or to use python2 otherwise.
virtualenv resolves the interpreter when you run virtualenv, and if you specify a different interpreter with `-p` it will resolve the path to the interpreter and then run virtualenv again using it.
> My main gripe with virtualenv is that it's required at all: other interpreted languages, like node and elixir for example, have figured out how to handle non-global dependencies without a third-party package. venv is…
I agree with almost all of this, but... > - you can't easily move virtualenvs; `virtualenv --relocatable`, though it's weird that it's not the default, yes.
That would just follow a singular simple algorithm, not really intelligence in any sense.
And people not knowing how Git actually works is in my experience where most people's problems with Git stems from.
You really shouldn't call it “Apache <anything>” without the express approval of the Apache foundation. If you want to call it something other than “Modified Apache 2.0”, you'll have to come up with a new name. Though…
You should have the backup codes stored somewhere more secure than your computer either way, quite possibly printed out.
Disregarding everything else pointed out in this thread, there's also the part where the website for the older name of the company, 1for.one, still lists Penny Kim as the Marketing Director:…
Not with DNSSEC, and the second part is covered by DANE.
PGP keyservers talk to each other, if you send your key to GnuPG keyserver it'll end up on MIT's keyserver pretty soon.
Which already exists.
Implied portability in what way?
No, with DANE nothing rests on CA's. With DANE domain owners store their keys in the DNS, and the DNS records are signed with DNSSEC
Yeah, .nyc is such a narrow area that it doesn't deserve it's own TLD.
If anything you should have the webroot directory in the git repo, not have the repo be the webroot
The point is that neither you nor anyone else could check for it if you/they wanted to.
If there's anything in your repo history that you don't want a hacker to find you can just remove it and force push.
> Second, understanding text requires knowing how the > information it contains is encoded (what language it > is written in). Drawings are far more universal. So you're saying that you can look at those old drawings…
Based on your phrasing it sounds like you think owning a national ID card is commonplace in Sweden. The national ID card system isn't widely used at all, most people use either their drivers license or passport when…
The newer ones don't have the color coding anymore, they're all just black, and the always-on ones have an additional symbol under the SS<USB> symbol.
A lot of JavaScript things have been buggy for me with encrypted.google.com as well. For example the Google timer cards and such often just won't start at all, while they'll work fine on the regular google.com.
Nomad is mentioned in the article, so they hardly forgot about it.
> But having another XML dialect that's not actual XML… HTML is based on SGML, it was never an XML dialect.
Regarding tags, https://github.com/cgwalters/git-evtag seems like a really interesting idea.
Non-conformant? PEP-394 says that scripts should only use python in the shebang if it's compatible with both py2 and py3, and be updated to work with both, or to use python2 otherwise.
virtualenv resolves the interpreter when you run virtualenv, and if you specify a different interpreter with `-p` it will resolve the path to the interpreter and then run virtualenv again using it.
> My main gripe with virtualenv is that it's required at all: other interpreted languages, like node and elixir for example, have figured out how to handle non-global dependencies without a third-party package. venv is…
I agree with almost all of this, but... > - you can't easily move virtualenvs; `virtualenv --relocatable`, though it's weird that it's not the default, yes.
That would just follow a singular simple algorithm, not really intelligence in any sense.
And people not knowing how Git actually works is in my experience where most people's problems with Git stems from.
You really shouldn't call it “Apache <anything>” without the express approval of the Apache foundation. If you want to call it something other than “Modified Apache 2.0”, you'll have to come up with a new name. Though…
You should have the backup codes stored somewhere more secure than your computer either way, quite possibly printed out.
Disregarding everything else pointed out in this thread, there's also the part where the website for the older name of the company, 1for.one, still lists Penny Kim as the Marketing Director:…
Not with DNSSEC, and the second part is covered by DANE.
PGP keyservers talk to each other, if you send your key to GnuPG keyserver it'll end up on MIT's keyserver pretty soon.
Which already exists.
Implied portability in what way?
No, with DANE nothing rests on CA's. With DANE domain owners store their keys in the DNS, and the DNS records are signed with DNSSEC
Yeah, .nyc is such a narrow area that it doesn't deserve it's own TLD.
If anything you should have the webroot directory in the git repo, not have the repo be the webroot
The point is that neither you nor anyone else could check for it if you/they wanted to.
If there's anything in your repo history that you don't want a hacker to find you can just remove it and force push.
> Second, understanding text requires knowing how the > information it contains is encoded (what language it > is written in). Drawings are far more universal. So you're saying that you can look at those old drawings…