verandaguys_alt
- Karma
- 38
- Created
- March 27, 2017 (9y ago)
- Submissions
- 0
I belong to user?id=verandaguy.
He uses this account when he can't access the password manager to get to his other account.
He uses this account when he can't access the password manager to get to his other account.
This feels like a corporate plug with extremely minimal engineering discussion, and which mostly just boasts platform features. I wouldn't even say this really counts as significant industry news.
There isn't, by design. You write _some_ black-box implementation locally which outputs a textual solution you drop into the browser (at least, this is how it was in 2015 when AoC started). I can't recommend this…
Honest question: is there any need to poll the touchpad more often than the screen's refresh rate (usually 144Hz or below as of this post)?
That's not a hobby -- that's a job that requires you to shill out to brands while being as loud and obnoxious as possible... A hobby isn't usually about being popular, it's just something you like doing on your spare…
While I don't want to downplay his role in mobilizing the community, it's hardly single-handed. Implementing ext/sodium was a group effort by dozens of developers, reviewers, and testers.
I actually posted the port on the Code Review SE, where (after almost a month of silence), someone stepped up and offered a CFFI solution. https://codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/157118/a-port...
While I've found that Haskell's laziness can often be worked around with appropriately-implemented memoization, it's an absolute PITA for anything that requires frequent hops into the IO monad (unsurprisingly).…
Progress has to begin somewhere. In another 10 years, this kind of lithography will likely have evolved into something much more viable.
Speaking as a non-American, this is partially-valid point, and a very frustrating one. While the only people who can affect the decision are Americans (members of congress won't, and fundamentally shouldn't listen to…