True, I do find it mildly infuriating that someone is mildly infuriated at this
True, I do find it mildly infuriating that someone is mildly infuriated at this
Security professional here too. Agree that this is reasonable, and making a big deal about it is kinda meh.
This describes the rabbit holes that programmers I work with go down and never come out very well
Not just updates, you need to periodically poll for messages as well, anyone who runs signal-cli runs into these issues
You will likely need to update every two weeks or it will stop working
Not true, I just tried to sign up:
Appears to be optional, if you don’t want to use a phone number.
My experience with contributing to gitlab has actually not been as you describe. Fairly fast responses, obviously targeted releases so I knew when to try and finish any Mr adjustments, bots that provided excellent aid and even ability to ask for subsystem specialist help, when CI shot out confusing errors that appeared unrelated. Frankly, I was impressed. I understand not every feature or bug would go this way, but if you follow their guidelines, get product road map positioning, it works. The amount of commits going in to main are incredible. The number of MRs they handle is equally impressive.
All of that said, I’ve still got issues in gitlab that are seven+ years old, without any movement. But I get it that they have to prioritize and contributions are a different story.
I heard that people at the Cia breathe air, and I bet you breathe air, so you are compromised by Cia air particles. XMPP is better because it’s XML and that can operate in a vacuum.
I think it would be a worthwhile research project to find out how many users just click through these, accepting what the website wants you to accept by default. It effectively operates like a EULA for every single website, which produces overall fatigue and lack of care. When you’ve visited 20 sites in one day, you just start being irritated by having to constantly make a decision before you can view any content, and just mash whatever button you need to proceed.
You should travel to Europe sometime and try to use the web
In the USA, admins being liable is not really true
Yeah, but the essentials still map like 90% of the time, unless you are using their paid stuff
Ubuntu solutions are Debian solutions
It’s it better than organic maps?