Right, linux should instead go by the normal extension for an elf, which is no extension... instead this problem is solved by prompting the user if they want to execute the program.
Where's the other 300k going? If you aren't spending it, what does it matter if it all gets taxed to nothing? And if you end up spending it, then boom there's your consumption that needs to be taxed.
Some file formats, eg png, require a particular file header in order to be considered valid. This is true regardless of your operating system, be it windows or linux. If that is hidden information, then it is hidden…
Am I missing something? Hiding things from users is a property of the windows approach. Did you reply to the wrong person?
the linux way works tho
The odd thing is the non conditional "before it lands" rather than "if it lands".
Very odd proposal. The new element syntax is perhaps the boldest choice. I wonder why they thought that was necessary. The idea of using this to defer rendering elements is also odd. So this would use a http long…
Sometimes humans talk not purely to accomplish things but rather for human contact and comradery.
Have they? The most popular post from this domain is 5 days old and has ~500 points. Hardly a crowd favourite. The submitter seems to be the author, but doesn't have any more popular posts. A search for "user8" on…
> What we call “consciousness” is merely a product of evolution, and also a tool shaped by evolution. that's the easy problem
> I think this hard problem has a simple answer that people just don’t like: consciousness is a powerful (and fundamental to our "calculator brain") illusion. who is eluded? people absolutely love this answer and give…
The table of contents opens links in a new tab. If they didn't, they would require a full page reload, because they don't use fragments. This is seemingly how substack is designed.
>If a url parameter would've been a vulnerability because something lower down the stack misinterprets it By assumption, you are using this url parameter. So you have a bug where you've forgotten to allow this…
>It’s possible that the teams you work with expect fuzzy behaviour from the website but that’s a choice, not a practice. This is how the vast majority of websites work. The practical reason is obvious: when we model the…
Standards are just commonly accepted behaviour that somebody chose to write down somewhere. There are a great number of commonly accepted behaviours that nobody's ever bothered to encode into a formal standard, but…
> It should be immediately obvious that in that scheme 404 is indeed the correct answer to unknown query parameters That's not obvious at all. If I receive json data that contains a property I'm not aware of, i don't…
The reason is that clients, even under xhtml, expect to be able to build webpages via templating. You need to reject that assumption and demand that servers build pages from an ast so that the backend guarantees that…
the only reason anyone would be interested in this result is because of the implication that it generalizes to other sites.
There are rss aggregators that poll every feed occasionally, then combine them into a single feed for each person to consume. Nostr works on a similar basis but you push to the aggregator instead of them pulling.
> We understood (and knew for a long time) that the large AI labs are not monetarily profiting from subscription users that make heavy use of their subscription. "profit" is a weird concept in the software business. it…
That was pretty clearly what happened with iran. Dunno if netanyahu is a zionist or not.
The bad publicity is all in tech spaces and they do ads IRL.
Causing your fellow student to do better shouldn't be harmful to you. Students should feel comfortable helping one another without fear of it worsening their own mark.
Was it actually superior though? The usual treatment is that packet switching works better at the scale of the internet. With voice, hogging a whole line works, but for the internet it makes more sense to slow everybody…
The hertz is formally defined as 1/s, except this leaves open the question of 1 what each second. I've seen it argued that since the numerator is unitless, and radians are also unitless, that the hertz as defined refers…
Right, linux should instead go by the normal extension for an elf, which is no extension... instead this problem is solved by prompting the user if they want to execute the program.
Where's the other 300k going? If you aren't spending it, what does it matter if it all gets taxed to nothing? And if you end up spending it, then boom there's your consumption that needs to be taxed.
Some file formats, eg png, require a particular file header in order to be considered valid. This is true regardless of your operating system, be it windows or linux. If that is hidden information, then it is hidden…
Am I missing something? Hiding things from users is a property of the windows approach. Did you reply to the wrong person?
the linux way works tho
The odd thing is the non conditional "before it lands" rather than "if it lands".
Very odd proposal. The new element syntax is perhaps the boldest choice. I wonder why they thought that was necessary. The idea of using this to defer rendering elements is also odd. So this would use a http long…
Sometimes humans talk not purely to accomplish things but rather for human contact and comradery.
Have they? The most popular post from this domain is 5 days old and has ~500 points. Hardly a crowd favourite. The submitter seems to be the author, but doesn't have any more popular posts. A search for "user8" on…
> What we call “consciousness” is merely a product of evolution, and also a tool shaped by evolution. that's the easy problem
> I think this hard problem has a simple answer that people just don’t like: consciousness is a powerful (and fundamental to our "calculator brain") illusion. who is eluded? people absolutely love this answer and give…
The table of contents opens links in a new tab. If they didn't, they would require a full page reload, because they don't use fragments. This is seemingly how substack is designed.
>If a url parameter would've been a vulnerability because something lower down the stack misinterprets it By assumption, you are using this url parameter. So you have a bug where you've forgotten to allow this…
>It’s possible that the teams you work with expect fuzzy behaviour from the website but that’s a choice, not a practice. This is how the vast majority of websites work. The practical reason is obvious: when we model the…
Standards are just commonly accepted behaviour that somebody chose to write down somewhere. There are a great number of commonly accepted behaviours that nobody's ever bothered to encode into a formal standard, but…
> It should be immediately obvious that in that scheme 404 is indeed the correct answer to unknown query parameters That's not obvious at all. If I receive json data that contains a property I'm not aware of, i don't…
The reason is that clients, even under xhtml, expect to be able to build webpages via templating. You need to reject that assumption and demand that servers build pages from an ast so that the backend guarantees that…
the only reason anyone would be interested in this result is because of the implication that it generalizes to other sites.
There are rss aggregators that poll every feed occasionally, then combine them into a single feed for each person to consume. Nostr works on a similar basis but you push to the aggregator instead of them pulling.
> We understood (and knew for a long time) that the large AI labs are not monetarily profiting from subscription users that make heavy use of their subscription. "profit" is a weird concept in the software business. it…
That was pretty clearly what happened with iran. Dunno if netanyahu is a zionist or not.
The bad publicity is all in tech spaces and they do ads IRL.
Causing your fellow student to do better shouldn't be harmful to you. Students should feel comfortable helping one another without fear of it worsening their own mark.
Was it actually superior though? The usual treatment is that packet switching works better at the scale of the internet. With voice, hogging a whole line works, but for the internet it makes more sense to slow everybody…
The hertz is formally defined as 1/s, except this leaves open the question of 1 what each second. I've seen it argued that since the numerator is unitless, and radians are also unitless, that the hertz as defined refers…