I'd assume the reason it's not advertised on the Mac App Store is because OS updates are now done through System Preferences.
They are, but that subdomain is proxied through Cloudflare. If they'd set it to just DNS then it would have still worked.
There was a security fix update in April: https://steamcommunity.com/games/70/announcements/detail/375...
Agreed, this is exactly how 2FA should work. Allowing support staff to deactivate 2FA is a massive security weakness.
These are not normal account signups, they are signups to become an associate member (https://join.osmfoundation.org/) which can vote in foundation elections.
The intention is that for repeated styles, components are extracted: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/extracting-components
I wanted to like Hugo (especially with its ridiculous speed compared to Jekyll), but I found that any time I wanted to do something slightly unusual I had to spend far too long finding what template file name I was…
Some observatories (including this one it seems) use liquid mercury as mirrors: https://sunspot.solar/about/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_mirror_telescope
For a device which is heavily used every single day, yes.
A zero-configuration free CDN is a pretty good reason in my opinion.
This is some _incredible_ clickbait. The latest JRE and JDK will continue to be free. What Oracle are charging for is continued Java 8 support.
A lot of those names are actually pretty sensible, but who thought "Amazon Unlimited FTP Server" was a good alternative to S3?
And he doesn't ridicule people who don't use HTTPS, he ridicules people who spread BS about how it's not necessary.
This is one of the (admittedly few) cases where javascript is actually required.
I think the primary purpose is the notifications, not the blocking. Even if they browse to the page once, see the block and disable it, you'll still know.
If you're looking for a replacement font for your tagline on the homepage, Montserrat isn't too different at the heavier weights. Nice to see Laravel Spark in the wild though.
It's Google's special brand font so I doubt they license it. However it is served from the same domain as Google Fonts so it's an easy mistake to make.
This definitely seems like an interesting product, but if you're an anti-piracy company then maybe you shouldn't be using a pirated font. If you check the Product Sans CSS file you're including, you'll see there's a…
It's the data protection authority of the country that represents the customer, such as the ICO for the UK.
It does work, I have a LE cert running behind cloudflare for Full SSL.
crt.sh reports it was revoked on the 26th: https://crt.sh/?id=274083328
I agree that it's something to be discussed, but OP was quite disparaging with his comparison to somebody cleaning a chalkboard. Providing the interns participate in the investigation, as they did in this case, they…
Had you actually read the article, you would have seen that: > From there, she took it upon herself to create a database for Enquirer reporters, documenting the time, location, and nature of every opioid-related arrest…
Smugmug's been around since 2002 so it can't be too much of a problem
Not a particularly good example considering the names are still on both the German and English language articles.
I'd assume the reason it's not advertised on the Mac App Store is because OS updates are now done through System Preferences.
They are, but that subdomain is proxied through Cloudflare. If they'd set it to just DNS then it would have still worked.
There was a security fix update in April: https://steamcommunity.com/games/70/announcements/detail/375...
Agreed, this is exactly how 2FA should work. Allowing support staff to deactivate 2FA is a massive security weakness.
These are not normal account signups, they are signups to become an associate member (https://join.osmfoundation.org/) which can vote in foundation elections.
The intention is that for repeated styles, components are extracted: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/extracting-components
I wanted to like Hugo (especially with its ridiculous speed compared to Jekyll), but I found that any time I wanted to do something slightly unusual I had to spend far too long finding what template file name I was…
Some observatories (including this one it seems) use liquid mercury as mirrors: https://sunspot.solar/about/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_mirror_telescope
For a device which is heavily used every single day, yes.
A zero-configuration free CDN is a pretty good reason in my opinion.
This is some _incredible_ clickbait. The latest JRE and JDK will continue to be free. What Oracle are charging for is continued Java 8 support.
A lot of those names are actually pretty sensible, but who thought "Amazon Unlimited FTP Server" was a good alternative to S3?
And he doesn't ridicule people who don't use HTTPS, he ridicules people who spread BS about how it's not necessary.
This is one of the (admittedly few) cases where javascript is actually required.
I think the primary purpose is the notifications, not the blocking. Even if they browse to the page once, see the block and disable it, you'll still know.
If you're looking for a replacement font for your tagline on the homepage, Montserrat isn't too different at the heavier weights. Nice to see Laravel Spark in the wild though.
It's Google's special brand font so I doubt they license it. However it is served from the same domain as Google Fonts so it's an easy mistake to make.
This definitely seems like an interesting product, but if you're an anti-piracy company then maybe you shouldn't be using a pirated font. If you check the Product Sans CSS file you're including, you'll see there's a…
It's the data protection authority of the country that represents the customer, such as the ICO for the UK.
It does work, I have a LE cert running behind cloudflare for Full SSL.
crt.sh reports it was revoked on the 26th: https://crt.sh/?id=274083328
I agree that it's something to be discussed, but OP was quite disparaging with his comparison to somebody cleaning a chalkboard. Providing the interns participate in the investigation, as they did in this case, they…
Had you actually read the article, you would have seen that: > From there, she took it upon herself to create a database for Enquirer reporters, documenting the time, location, and nature of every opioid-related arrest…
Smugmug's been around since 2002 so it can't be too much of a problem
Not a particularly good example considering the names are still on both the German and English language articles.