This is admittedly an aside from the content of the post itself, but... why do so many mobile sites insist on preventing zooming in and seem to share the same incredibly buggy image zooming? It's quite frustrating.
Couldn't even get himself to say "thanks" for receiving $120,000 from the guy by the way, could only manage "that was cool"
The number of critical CVEs every year related to memory safety seems to point to the contrary. The amount of "just one more static analysizer and we'll never have any bugs!" in the C++ community is honestly disturbing,…
Depending on the app, you could also get away with limited messaging such as a wheel of predefined callouts in a team game.
> or on the fly using stable diffusion Steganography fundamentally requires you to be able to know where the data is, which requires you to have the original image to compare against. The only other strategy I'm aware…
Although it would be much more exciting to have some world conspiracy, try to consider what that would mean. That conspiracy's so powerful it can singularly decide votes across a union of dozens of countries, and yet…
Such systems are unfortunately trivially defeated by, for example, adding rings of colourful blocks around the edges of the image. If the scanning systems are then updated to notice rings around the image, bad actors…
> I wonder if you're confusing statements of fact, for attacks? Hearsay and gossip from the "juicy grape vine" along with implying Jarred is too stupid to critically think about his own path in life because he didn't go…
How is it kind to imply that by not going to university, Jarred was too stupid to think critically about his own path in life? Or just this in its entirety: "Jarred was a stinky manager. Poor communication, unrealistic…
The argument isn't to avoid calling out "bad" behaviour, it's that you can do so with a professional (or at least not actively childish) tone. Using phrases like "stinky manager" while taking multiple jabs at Jarred's…
It looks like doctests aren't supported: https://github.com/nextest-rs/nextest/issues/16
Unfortunately all of the major AI model providers are massively incentivized to fit their models to various political narratives, especially through historical denialism. The "diverse 1940s German soldiers" debacle from…
Who's arguing for that? And why is it not "reasonable" to ask for basic privacy?
They either just ban E2EE messaging or add a client-side scan of the content before "encrypting" it.
Just wanted to say I'm impressed with the speed of progress! There's clearly a lot of passion being poured into the project, and I appreciate that folks are responding really quickly to things. It looks like you've…
How much of this is vibe coded? The widget demos about halfway down seem half-baked; the currency input allows letters and letter inputs visually disappear when you unfocus it. The calendar input appears to select the…
Apple is also an absolutely enormous company. Even if Valve wanted to lock in prices, they're simply too small for RAM manufacturers to notice on their radar, unfortunately.
That's true for arrays of these value classes. Scalarization would help for larger local values though, since those would avoid pointer indirection for purely local values.
> But the difference in memory is fundamental. The JVM can now store the values themselves in the array, laid out densely one after another: 8 bytes per point (plus a possible null flag), in a contiguous block. No…
Is this at all coherent...? The author really seems to be comparing cookies to JWTs as if they exist in the same category, but it really is apples to oranges here. In fact, one of the first articles they link to spell…
Yes? It's unclear how they'd do their job without extensive fingerprinting. I don't like it either, but pretending like it's not better positioned from a privacy standpoint is odd. At very least, turnstile isn't ran by…
> or maybe one of them could just invest in packaging custom html elements, instead of assuming I'm going to use one of a handful of unnecessary "component" libraries ... are these not the same thing? I suppose from a…
> Reduce risk of failure through artificial intelligence. CQL contains an embedded automated theorem prover that guarantees the correctness of CQL programs. Man, it's a rough environment right now marketing-wise. I…
Could you elaborate on what other disclosure models you're referring to? I can't imagine something being "more responsible" for the public than privately notifying the owning party to give them time to fix the issue,…
> So it’s not quite as horrible as it sounds. I don't know about you, but if a random webpage takes 60+ seconds to load, I just close it and choose to never interact with that site again (unless it's my bank, which is a…
This is admittedly an aside from the content of the post itself, but... why do so many mobile sites insist on preventing zooming in and seem to share the same incredibly buggy image zooming? It's quite frustrating.
Couldn't even get himself to say "thanks" for receiving $120,000 from the guy by the way, could only manage "that was cool"
The number of critical CVEs every year related to memory safety seems to point to the contrary. The amount of "just one more static analysizer and we'll never have any bugs!" in the C++ community is honestly disturbing,…
Depending on the app, you could also get away with limited messaging such as a wheel of predefined callouts in a team game.
> or on the fly using stable diffusion Steganography fundamentally requires you to be able to know where the data is, which requires you to have the original image to compare against. The only other strategy I'm aware…
Although it would be much more exciting to have some world conspiracy, try to consider what that would mean. That conspiracy's so powerful it can singularly decide votes across a union of dozens of countries, and yet…
Such systems are unfortunately trivially defeated by, for example, adding rings of colourful blocks around the edges of the image. If the scanning systems are then updated to notice rings around the image, bad actors…
> I wonder if you're confusing statements of fact, for attacks? Hearsay and gossip from the "juicy grape vine" along with implying Jarred is too stupid to critically think about his own path in life because he didn't go…
How is it kind to imply that by not going to university, Jarred was too stupid to think critically about his own path in life? Or just this in its entirety: "Jarred was a stinky manager. Poor communication, unrealistic…
The argument isn't to avoid calling out "bad" behaviour, it's that you can do so with a professional (or at least not actively childish) tone. Using phrases like "stinky manager" while taking multiple jabs at Jarred's…
It looks like doctests aren't supported: https://github.com/nextest-rs/nextest/issues/16
Unfortunately all of the major AI model providers are massively incentivized to fit their models to various political narratives, especially through historical denialism. The "diverse 1940s German soldiers" debacle from…
Who's arguing for that? And why is it not "reasonable" to ask for basic privacy?
They either just ban E2EE messaging or add a client-side scan of the content before "encrypting" it.
Just wanted to say I'm impressed with the speed of progress! There's clearly a lot of passion being poured into the project, and I appreciate that folks are responding really quickly to things. It looks like you've…
How much of this is vibe coded? The widget demos about halfway down seem half-baked; the currency input allows letters and letter inputs visually disappear when you unfocus it. The calendar input appears to select the…
Apple is also an absolutely enormous company. Even if Valve wanted to lock in prices, they're simply too small for RAM manufacturers to notice on their radar, unfortunately.
That's true for arrays of these value classes. Scalarization would help for larger local values though, since those would avoid pointer indirection for purely local values.
> But the difference in memory is fundamental. The JVM can now store the values themselves in the array, laid out densely one after another: 8 bytes per point (plus a possible null flag), in a contiguous block. No…
Is this at all coherent...? The author really seems to be comparing cookies to JWTs as if they exist in the same category, but it really is apples to oranges here. In fact, one of the first articles they link to spell…
Yes? It's unclear how they'd do their job without extensive fingerprinting. I don't like it either, but pretending like it's not better positioned from a privacy standpoint is odd. At very least, turnstile isn't ran by…
> or maybe one of them could just invest in packaging custom html elements, instead of assuming I'm going to use one of a handful of unnecessary "component" libraries ... are these not the same thing? I suppose from a…
> Reduce risk of failure through artificial intelligence. CQL contains an embedded automated theorem prover that guarantees the correctness of CQL programs. Man, it's a rough environment right now marketing-wise. I…
Could you elaborate on what other disclosure models you're referring to? I can't imagine something being "more responsible" for the public than privately notifying the owning party to give them time to fix the issue,…
> So it’s not quite as horrible as it sounds. I don't know about you, but if a random webpage takes 60+ seconds to load, I just close it and choose to never interact with that site again (unless it's my bank, which is a…