More spyware please!
Just make sure your custom domain registrar is using a different email from your custom domain or you might run into a support nightmare.
Run k3s on top and run your stateless services on a lightweight kubernetes, then you won’t care you have to reboot your hosts to apply updates?
The #!/bin/bash thing (first line) is called the shebang and it can use any application not just shell, so that means Python or PowerShell or any other tool.
StarVector is a foundation model for generating Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) code from images and text. It utilizes a Vision-Language Modeling architecture to understand both visual and textual inputs, enabling high-quality vectorization and text-guided SVG creation.
I was just thinking about an img2svg generator. I was tying to get Claude to do it earlier today with poor results.
I guess it depends on the coin. Probably would work given the sdcard outline would be hard to notice if it even registers. Xray of coins
I’m pretty sure an xray will go through a hollowed out coin showing the sd card and then you’re fucked.
Benefit of the doubt, maybe security thing. Fo you really want random apps to have access to that stuff? As long as they give a way to disable those permissions from any app, it’s definitely time 3rd party apps have access to it, but don’t think flipping the switch is the right approach. There needs to be security controls placed on the access and integration to the permissions framework, auditing etc. That’s why Apple just completely removed some features in EU instead of making them available - it’s a lot of work. Admittedly Apple has had a lot of time to work on this, and get it right, but it’s never just as easy as it would seem.
If you’re presented your Steam games from inside Xbox app, they will present asa game from the Xbox service.
Buying games from Steam is braindead simple, so not sure what you’re on about there. Can’t get much simpler than punch in billing and CC info once, add games to cart and checkout; subsequent purchases is even easier.
Isn’t that misleading the consumer? They will think the games are Xbox games and not Steam games. They will come to resent the 2nd launcher, aka Steam, and Microsoft’s EEE will be complete.
It’s the ratchet effect. Right pulls us right and left refuses to budge left. Net effect, slow but steady moment to the right.
You’re on a 50 Gbps connection and you want more?
It’s the little things that always add up. It’s not the lack of feature but their dismissal of it I guess.
Good to know. My experience with nginx is definitely on the light end. I much prefer traefik I guess coming from k3s world.
As if I needed another reason to avoid nginx.
Seems like a very simple, lightweight and elegant solution to keeping the engine up to modern standards. If they were serious about keeping complexity out they wouldn’t have such garbage site configuration.
Where can I find the protocol specifications?
He’d finally get that Nobel Peace Prize he’s eyeing and I’d cheer it on.
Ah yes, another episode of Big Copyright vs. Common Sense. On one hand, you’ve got the recording industry treating ISPs like unpaid content police, demanding they nuke users’ internet access over allegations (not proof—just allegations) of piracy. On the other, you have ISPs whining about “crushing liability” while charging exorbitant fees for mediocre service. Hard to pick a hero here.
Grande’s point about the lack of clear guidelines is fair, though. The DMCA’s “repeat infringer” concept is a mess—there’s no defined threshold, no guarantee users can defend themselves, and ISPs are stuck guessing how aggressive they need to be to avoid lawsuits. Do they ban users after two accusations? Ten? A thousand? And who verifies these claims when DMCA notices are * notoriously* abused?
The cherry on top? The Twitter v. Taamneh ruling basically told platforms they don’t have to deplatform users just because their service was misused. Seems like ISPs should get the same treatment—providing internet access shouldn’t make them responsible for everything their customers do, just like Verizon isn’t liable if someone robs a bank using their phone network.
This case could be a big deal if SCOTUS takes it up. Either we get actual legal clarity, or we continue letting industry giants duke it out while regular users live in fear of getting their WiFi cut off because grandma clicked the wrong totally legal YouTube-to-MP3 converter.
I’m out of the loop. Why did github “block” Organic Maps?