It's funny to me as well. Being initially inspired by Yelp's dockersh I wrote a functional MVP of the same concept around 2 years ago. It used a custom Go sshd-proxy to spawn kata-container backed pods in kubernetes. I…
I think it may be in use by tools without people being aware. I decided to check my workstation for it just in case, figuring the file would be empty, or not exist. Instead it seems to be populated with what seem to be…
Something that I've noticed that somehow ends up lost when people learn "the model" is the encapsulation aspects. I don't know if it's missing in people's course work or what, but I've had to use…
Kaliningrad/Königsberg is a more apt comparison then? Because that's functionally what the CCCP did.
What do we consider "forced out of their home and livelihood". Allied bombing of Japan in WWII destroyed upwards of 3.4 million homes and rendered the areas unlivable for a period of time.
Is this not just related to the Dual_EC_DRBG and other tainted RNG issues we've known about, and mitigated, for years? You can see discussion on this going on as far back as 2015, explicitly in regards to what "SIGINT…
They're fairly well known in networking circles. They're basically THE company for buying cheap, but functional, networking bits-and-bobs-- either in bulk, or as an alternative to prowling ebay for smaller purchases. I…
What makes you say that? Mussolini was in Milan, and stayed in Milan, when he ordered the coup march to Rome. Mussolini lead his coup from >100-600km away from the march, why would the leader of Wagner need to be in the…
What makes NAT the "main factor" for that. I'm pretty sure every consumer router since at least 2002, if not further back, has had some stateful firewall implementation with default deny rules.
Would you need the principles of structure engineering to assess that house's toaster? Much like a house is more than just the structure itself, so is the realm of computers.
I'm not sure I understand. Generally in Go: functions, structs, and consts are namespaced in a way I think is familiar to most, by package origin. If something is not, then it's either a function/struct in the same…
I'm not sure I'd describe the golang community's attitude as a complete write-off of frameworks. I don't think I personally know a Go developer who doesn't use some sort of web framework (I personally use Echo, for…
Some examples for anyone else reading: Go: https://github.com/kyleconroy/sqlc Rust: https://github.com/cornucopia-rs/cornucopia This is my preferred method of interacting with databases now, if available. Very flexible.
You can get some of properties you describe with the behavior most people would want via a combination of anycast, some route exchange protocol (probably BGP), and ECMP.
It has: * Relatively simple syntax. * "Good enough" expressivity-- nothing that's considered "missing" has been a true blocker for most projects. * An easily accessible concurrency primitive, with the bonus that the…
> This is the !very first! statement of the opening paragraph of my comment. Why are you saying that I have not said it. Have you not read the actual comment? > Why would they be relied upon if they exist, even further,…
> How does this justify removing an actual historic term from the vocabulary. Language mutates. > It amazes me how someone that claims any insight in the matters of law can ask for 'sources' for such a thing. It just…
Do we have a different understanding of the word "rely"? You didn't even use the word "BASED". When you say: > It does not rely on agreements, contracts, negotiations or precedents. Why would they exist conceptually if…
> Long standing in history, long standing in diplomacy, long standing in actual freaking Louis XIV administration communique, long standing in practically everything. That's neat, the dead are welcome to their opinions.…
Their entire statement of > civil law system ... does not rely on agreements, contracts, negotiations or precedents. It cannot be 'interpreted' betrays that they've never examined legal proceedings in either system.…
Long standing in what circles? I've only seen it in Russian derived or connected media, political think, and institutions. The primary source of papers using that term to refer to US law seems to be the Russian State…
> these were amateurs who didnt know that in Anglosaxon common law, you have to avoid being honest about anything and even deny any wrongdoing even if you get caught the act of murdering someone Ignoring the…
Pretending there isn't a difference between "opinionated views" and collaborating with Russian military while spreading disinformation doesn't help you. The examples you've provided have done the latter. Stop using…
It's not even close. You're comparing a time sensitive attack with tons of security to 4 pipes sitting in the ocean. A lone attacker on a short time scale, versus a potential entire state backed demolitions team with…
It's not. Instead of trying to come up with convoluted analogies for my conclusion to try and paint it as outlandish, maybe go back to talking about off topic stuff like BRICS.
It's funny to me as well. Being initially inspired by Yelp's dockersh I wrote a functional MVP of the same concept around 2 years ago. It used a custom Go sshd-proxy to spawn kata-container backed pods in kubernetes. I…
I think it may be in use by tools without people being aware. I decided to check my workstation for it just in case, figuring the file would be empty, or not exist. Instead it seems to be populated with what seem to be…
Something that I've noticed that somehow ends up lost when people learn "the model" is the encapsulation aspects. I don't know if it's missing in people's course work or what, but I've had to use…
Kaliningrad/Königsberg is a more apt comparison then? Because that's functionally what the CCCP did.
What do we consider "forced out of their home and livelihood". Allied bombing of Japan in WWII destroyed upwards of 3.4 million homes and rendered the areas unlivable for a period of time.
Is this not just related to the Dual_EC_DRBG and other tainted RNG issues we've known about, and mitigated, for years? You can see discussion on this going on as far back as 2015, explicitly in regards to what "SIGINT…
They're fairly well known in networking circles. They're basically THE company for buying cheap, but functional, networking bits-and-bobs-- either in bulk, or as an alternative to prowling ebay for smaller purchases. I…
What makes you say that? Mussolini was in Milan, and stayed in Milan, when he ordered the coup march to Rome. Mussolini lead his coup from >100-600km away from the march, why would the leader of Wagner need to be in the…
What makes NAT the "main factor" for that. I'm pretty sure every consumer router since at least 2002, if not further back, has had some stateful firewall implementation with default deny rules.
Would you need the principles of structure engineering to assess that house's toaster? Much like a house is more than just the structure itself, so is the realm of computers.
I'm not sure I understand. Generally in Go: functions, structs, and consts are namespaced in a way I think is familiar to most, by package origin. If something is not, then it's either a function/struct in the same…
I'm not sure I'd describe the golang community's attitude as a complete write-off of frameworks. I don't think I personally know a Go developer who doesn't use some sort of web framework (I personally use Echo, for…
Some examples for anyone else reading: Go: https://github.com/kyleconroy/sqlc Rust: https://github.com/cornucopia-rs/cornucopia This is my preferred method of interacting with databases now, if available. Very flexible.
You can get some of properties you describe with the behavior most people would want via a combination of anycast, some route exchange protocol (probably BGP), and ECMP.
It has: * Relatively simple syntax. * "Good enough" expressivity-- nothing that's considered "missing" has been a true blocker for most projects. * An easily accessible concurrency primitive, with the bonus that the…
> This is the !very first! statement of the opening paragraph of my comment. Why are you saying that I have not said it. Have you not read the actual comment? > Why would they be relied upon if they exist, even further,…
> How does this justify removing an actual historic term from the vocabulary. Language mutates. > It amazes me how someone that claims any insight in the matters of law can ask for 'sources' for such a thing. It just…
Do we have a different understanding of the word "rely"? You didn't even use the word "BASED". When you say: > It does not rely on agreements, contracts, negotiations or precedents. Why would they exist conceptually if…
> Long standing in history, long standing in diplomacy, long standing in actual freaking Louis XIV administration communique, long standing in practically everything. That's neat, the dead are welcome to their opinions.…
Their entire statement of > civil law system ... does not rely on agreements, contracts, negotiations or precedents. It cannot be 'interpreted' betrays that they've never examined legal proceedings in either system.…
Long standing in what circles? I've only seen it in Russian derived or connected media, political think, and institutions. The primary source of papers using that term to refer to US law seems to be the Russian State…
> these were amateurs who didnt know that in Anglosaxon common law, you have to avoid being honest about anything and even deny any wrongdoing even if you get caught the act of murdering someone Ignoring the…
Pretending there isn't a difference between "opinionated views" and collaborating with Russian military while spreading disinformation doesn't help you. The examples you've provided have done the latter. Stop using…
It's not even close. You're comparing a time sensitive attack with tons of security to 4 pipes sitting in the ocean. A lone attacker on a short time scale, versus a potential entire state backed demolitions team with…
It's not. Instead of trying to come up with convoluted analogies for my conclusion to try and paint it as outlandish, maybe go back to talking about off topic stuff like BRICS.