Rust has perfectly fine tools to deal with such issues, namely enums. Of course that cascades through every bit of related code and is a major pain.
Rust has perfectly fine tools to deal with such issues, namely enums. Of course that cascades through every bit of related code and is a major pain.
In the bottom picture it looks like the top “port” is just an air intake.
I would guess a swappable battery would be separated from the vehicle, similar to a gas bottle for a grill.
The battery would be rented for a small deposit and on swapping you only pay the energy + service fee.
I guess you could also buy one to own, but then could not swap that.
That’s how it would make sense, at least.
Back in the day Signal was a Qt app, did that change?
The option to use TOTP is already well hidden. It’s not like someone who does not know what he is looking for and uses an Authenticator already will accidentally select it.
I mean, other file sync apps upload everything to a third party while you’re working with the device.
Then, when you use another device the first one can be turned off.
Then why does the kernel have a crypto API?
Checkmate, Satoshi Torvalds!
Most x86 EFIs are, so the comparison is not really fair.
That’s Canonical building Mir 2.
I hate thinking of usernames and I am extremely bad at it.
There also isn’t a loop instruction though.
Not here, because it’s being used as a function argument.
It’s not even controllable RGB? Just shitty rainbow all the time?
The truth is that there is value in both a generalist and a specialist.
I think that’s fairly obvious with the smaller text and context.
That’s wrong, data is still usually encrypted.
A locked bootloader ‘just’ prevents tampering with the OS. You’re only pwned when using the phone after it has been manipulated.
That’s not how any of this works.
First of all, stripping passwords is never okay. You can reject the password and let the user choose a new one, but never just modify it on your own.
Then, if your system is at risk of code injection by certain characters in user input, please just shut it down and never turn it on again.
Stripping characters from passwords, great idea! Right up there with truncating passwords that are too long.
There is a wrapper for podman supporting compose.
But maybe it’s time to use kubernetes deployments or pods instead of compose files…
Not really, if absent means “no change”, present means “update” and null means “delete” the three values are perfectly well defined.
For what it’s worth, Amazon and Microsoft do it like this in their IoT offerings.