"All the functions" - I guarantee you that almost any function you want in Excel is in Sheets. Just because you don't know how to use it or find it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. The only reason you know how to use…
Array destructuring: already existed, list() pseudo-function Array spreading: already existed, array_merge Variadic functions: are probably better implemented as a function accepting an array, especially now that…
> Fallback to HTTP reachable via port 80 on the private IP for the server. How, exactly, is that better than using a common cert? What threat do you propose that applies to HTTPS with a shared cert, and not to HTTP?
What? No. While those are meant to be reserved, nothing stops you from configuring your resolver to answer for them.
This is intentional on Netgear's part, and does not in any way degrade security compared to the alternative (an untrusted cert or no HTTPS). It is neither a bug nor a security issue.
Yes, I know what dosbox is, thank you. That's ... why I mentioned it ...
> Is there an equivalent like that now for game development? dosbox is your equivalent.
They did not win based on their "higher standard of service", but based on their price, which was only possible due to their non-compliance with regulatory requirements.
But you will never get customers without drivers and you will never get drivers without customers. Plenty of Uber/Lyft competitors have tried and failed. Heck, a few different companies tried here in Austin once we grew…
> 1) A sophisticated compiler might read the length of a file before loading it, so that it can allocate a buffer of the right size. Doesn't work with /dev/stdin. gcc does this. It appears to be why /proc files don't…
> Recently I saw a tweet where someone mentioned that you can include /dev/stdin in C code compiled with gcc. This is, to say the very least, surprising. You can also call something to read from stdin in your Makefile,…
This seems great. For someone who already knows Kotlin.
It's not hard to build a ride sharing app. It is, however, hard to get drivers and customers FOR your ride sharing app.
Surprise! Now that they've mostly killed off taxi companies, their rates will be the same as taxi companies. Who could've seen that coming? Oh wait.
Errrrr... dosbox?
Whether there's a bug in the underlying API code, or a bug in the web server, there's a risk that it "may or may not result in the standard response format you're expecting", and therefore... should be a 500 error. Yes,…
That's... extremely rare, extremely ancient, and even then was usually only a problem below a certain page length.
> it's not like you can't design super lean websites anyway. Sure, but people don't.
> I've been using the web on mobile connections ever since I got my first iPhone in 2008. Okay, great. You had one of the most powerful phones at the time. How was the experience for people with a "feature phone" in…
> because it helps drive up the current average affordable densities of RAM and storage It does, but it also means that RAM and storage isn't available to be used for other things. Think about what you could if you had…
JavaScript, SPAs, animations, pages filled with "pretty" instead of content.
Site blocking the page with an empty overlay named "BorlabsCookie". No thanks.
There are plenty of other ways to fingerprint a user. https://amiunique.org/
Pricing for the v8 is identical to the NUC7i7DN. v6 is identical to NUC7i5DN. https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/AMD-Ryzen-Embedded-V180... https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/AMD-Ryzen-Embedded-V160...
No? It would seem to apply to current employees who move to Russia/China who are in roles covered by the block. i.e. they would have the choice of moving and changing roles/quitting, or staying.
"All the functions" - I guarantee you that almost any function you want in Excel is in Sheets. Just because you don't know how to use it or find it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. The only reason you know how to use…
Array destructuring: already existed, list() pseudo-function Array spreading: already existed, array_merge Variadic functions: are probably better implemented as a function accepting an array, especially now that…
> Fallback to HTTP reachable via port 80 on the private IP for the server. How, exactly, is that better than using a common cert? What threat do you propose that applies to HTTPS with a shared cert, and not to HTTP?
What? No. While those are meant to be reserved, nothing stops you from configuring your resolver to answer for them.
This is intentional on Netgear's part, and does not in any way degrade security compared to the alternative (an untrusted cert or no HTTPS). It is neither a bug nor a security issue.
Yes, I know what dosbox is, thank you. That's ... why I mentioned it ...
> Is there an equivalent like that now for game development? dosbox is your equivalent.
They did not win based on their "higher standard of service", but based on their price, which was only possible due to their non-compliance with regulatory requirements.
But you will never get customers without drivers and you will never get drivers without customers. Plenty of Uber/Lyft competitors have tried and failed. Heck, a few different companies tried here in Austin once we grew…
> 1) A sophisticated compiler might read the length of a file before loading it, so that it can allocate a buffer of the right size. Doesn't work with /dev/stdin. gcc does this. It appears to be why /proc files don't…
> Recently I saw a tweet where someone mentioned that you can include /dev/stdin in C code compiled with gcc. This is, to say the very least, surprising. You can also call something to read from stdin in your Makefile,…
This seems great. For someone who already knows Kotlin.
It's not hard to build a ride sharing app. It is, however, hard to get drivers and customers FOR your ride sharing app.
Surprise! Now that they've mostly killed off taxi companies, their rates will be the same as taxi companies. Who could've seen that coming? Oh wait.
Errrrr... dosbox?
Whether there's a bug in the underlying API code, or a bug in the web server, there's a risk that it "may or may not result in the standard response format you're expecting", and therefore... should be a 500 error. Yes,…
That's... extremely rare, extremely ancient, and even then was usually only a problem below a certain page length.
> it's not like you can't design super lean websites anyway. Sure, but people don't.
> I've been using the web on mobile connections ever since I got my first iPhone in 2008. Okay, great. You had one of the most powerful phones at the time. How was the experience for people with a "feature phone" in…
> because it helps drive up the current average affordable densities of RAM and storage It does, but it also means that RAM and storage isn't available to be used for other things. Think about what you could if you had…
JavaScript, SPAs, animations, pages filled with "pretty" instead of content.
Site blocking the page with an empty overlay named "BorlabsCookie". No thanks.
There are plenty of other ways to fingerprint a user. https://amiunique.org/
Pricing for the v8 is identical to the NUC7i7DN. v6 is identical to NUC7i5DN. https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/AMD-Ryzen-Embedded-V180... https://www.cpubenchmark.net/compare/AMD-Ryzen-Embedded-V160...
No? It would seem to apply to current employees who move to Russia/China who are in roles covered by the block. i.e. they would have the choice of moving and changing roles/quitting, or staying.