Curious, anything specific that you'd highlight compared to a setup like Remix that make it easier to ship with Next?
Ah, forgot that this is talking about assessment fees! :)
...and this is why it's mostly a good thing that the fee %'s are capped in the EU
What I find to be a rather interesting tidbit related to this is that some applications (e.g. certain garbage collectors) map multiple ranges of virtual memory that address the same physical memory.
There are ways to avoid having buses stuck in traffic. Dedicated lanes for public transport, getting more people to use public transport rather than cars, and so on. So I'd say it's more often than not a choice in…
Especially considering that OP posted a link to uniqkey a couple months ago on HN (not necessarily wrong, but considering that downloading the "whitepaper" also asks for a bunch of PI...)
The idea is that you aren't giving away any kind of biometric data, just using your fingerprint/face-unlock/etc to "unlock" the key used for signing the request locally. It could also be implemented in a way where it's…
It's not what they're doing here, but you should be able to read the biometric chip using a phone and verify the data that it contains server-side (since it's signed). Not sure how easy it is to get hold of the public…
But the new connector is still only rated for 600W (if used within spec), if we directly compare that to using 4 of the old connectors (rated at 150W each) we're spreading the same load over many more pins. A 12VHPWR…
Even easier to use the old standard instead of making a new solution to a problem that didn't exist in the first place (except for aesthetic reasons). The old connectors were solid and had plenty of headroom if used…
At least Webhallen in Sweden sells them in physical stores around the country. Not sure about other places though. Weirdly enough it's also cheaper to buy a 12m card there (500SEK instead of the usual 600SEK). Checked,…
Terrible (for 2.4/5GHz). They seemed to have worked around there not being a lot of hobbyist receivers by buying toy submarines that use lower frequencies like 40MHz and used the boards from there, nifty but seems very…
> "The laptop also has a questionable focus on NFTs, promising 100 of them to the first pre-orders, claiming to be "Web3-friendly,"" Besides not publishing pricing or detailed specs this close to the planned shipping…
You could surely still have this for non-genuine / used batteries, but here we have a genuine battery coming straight from Apple throwing that warning. Just let 3rd party repair shops buy them at a reasonable price and…
Though it defeats the point of TOTP to some extent.
Isn't that way too extreme? Firefox and Chrome don't share a lot of similarities, except arguably both implementing manifest v3 after Google's push, but even those are fairly different.
(in reply to krehl) And in that specific case you should probably have a DPA ready. Big issue with anything Google-related (and probably CloudFlare) is that they may transfer the data outside of the EU[0]. [0]…
As annoying as that might be, exporting followers seems like a use-case that Twitter might not want to freely support?
The apps also work as a backup to some extent (and still let you export even if the server is down)
Wouldn't a better alternative be a summary of the 300 page document? Both that and a FAQ wouldn't be the canonical sources in a legal capacity, but a summary has the benefit of deduplication and is probably nicer to…
It lets you choose a bi-monthly schedule for the exports, then you just need to automate the download from the link that you get emailed.
From the discussion thread on GitHub[0]: A change in the handling of URL schemes was deployed a couple of days ago that caused the regression being discussed here. Due to the amount of traffic that the archive endpoints…
I didn't read it as if they switched away from rice cakes but that they used brownies in another event. Rice cakes in general are pretty great as on-bike nutrition and used by world tour teams. EF-Nippo's recipe for…
The parent comments were talking about applying a crack to a legitimately obtained copy (which I assume the case covers) and not the act of distributing a cracked copy (which it definitely doesn't cover).
Wouldn't that depend on local laws? My assumption is that it would be covered by the recent EU court ruling that allows reverse engineering to fix bugs[0]. [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28809559
Curious, anything specific that you'd highlight compared to a setup like Remix that make it easier to ship with Next?
Ah, forgot that this is talking about assessment fees! :)
...and this is why it's mostly a good thing that the fee %'s are capped in the EU
What I find to be a rather interesting tidbit related to this is that some applications (e.g. certain garbage collectors) map multiple ranges of virtual memory that address the same physical memory.
There are ways to avoid having buses stuck in traffic. Dedicated lanes for public transport, getting more people to use public transport rather than cars, and so on. So I'd say it's more often than not a choice in…
Especially considering that OP posted a link to uniqkey a couple months ago on HN (not necessarily wrong, but considering that downloading the "whitepaper" also asks for a bunch of PI...)
The idea is that you aren't giving away any kind of biometric data, just using your fingerprint/face-unlock/etc to "unlock" the key used for signing the request locally. It could also be implemented in a way where it's…
It's not what they're doing here, but you should be able to read the biometric chip using a phone and verify the data that it contains server-side (since it's signed). Not sure how easy it is to get hold of the public…
But the new connector is still only rated for 600W (if used within spec), if we directly compare that to using 4 of the old connectors (rated at 150W each) we're spreading the same load over many more pins. A 12VHPWR…
Even easier to use the old standard instead of making a new solution to a problem that didn't exist in the first place (except for aesthetic reasons). The old connectors were solid and had plenty of headroom if used…
At least Webhallen in Sweden sells them in physical stores around the country. Not sure about other places though. Weirdly enough it's also cheaper to buy a 12m card there (500SEK instead of the usual 600SEK). Checked,…
Terrible (for 2.4/5GHz). They seemed to have worked around there not being a lot of hobbyist receivers by buying toy submarines that use lower frequencies like 40MHz and used the boards from there, nifty but seems very…
> "The laptop also has a questionable focus on NFTs, promising 100 of them to the first pre-orders, claiming to be "Web3-friendly,"" Besides not publishing pricing or detailed specs this close to the planned shipping…
You could surely still have this for non-genuine / used batteries, but here we have a genuine battery coming straight from Apple throwing that warning. Just let 3rd party repair shops buy them at a reasonable price and…
Though it defeats the point of TOTP to some extent.
Isn't that way too extreme? Firefox and Chrome don't share a lot of similarities, except arguably both implementing manifest v3 after Google's push, but even those are fairly different.
(in reply to krehl) And in that specific case you should probably have a DPA ready. Big issue with anything Google-related (and probably CloudFlare) is that they may transfer the data outside of the EU[0]. [0]…
As annoying as that might be, exporting followers seems like a use-case that Twitter might not want to freely support?
The apps also work as a backup to some extent (and still let you export even if the server is down)
Wouldn't a better alternative be a summary of the 300 page document? Both that and a FAQ wouldn't be the canonical sources in a legal capacity, but a summary has the benefit of deduplication and is probably nicer to…
It lets you choose a bi-monthly schedule for the exports, then you just need to automate the download from the link that you get emailed.
From the discussion thread on GitHub[0]: A change in the handling of URL schemes was deployed a couple of days ago that caused the regression being discussed here. Due to the amount of traffic that the archive endpoints…
I didn't read it as if they switched away from rice cakes but that they used brownies in another event. Rice cakes in general are pretty great as on-bike nutrition and used by world tour teams. EF-Nippo's recipe for…
The parent comments were talking about applying a crack to a legitimately obtained copy (which I assume the case covers) and not the act of distributing a cracked copy (which it definitely doesn't cover).
Wouldn't that depend on local laws? My assumption is that it would be covered by the recent EU court ruling that allows reverse engineering to fix bugs[0]. [0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=28809559