More than that, your editor doesn’t run with root permissions, which reduces the risk of accidentally overwriting something you didn’t mean to.
More than that, your editor doesn’t run with root permissions, which reduces the risk of accidentally overwriting something you didn’t mean to.
it feels to me, like they’re less looking for new people to start doing this “work”, but more to connect with people who already happen to be enthusiastically going to events and showing off their laptops.
I really think that’s the secret end game behind all the AI stuff in both Windows and MacOS. MS account required to use it. (anyone know if you need to be signed in to apple ID for apple ai?) “on device” inference that sometimes will reach out to the cloud. when it feels like it. maybe sometimes the cloud will reach out to you and ask your cpu to help out with training.
that, and better local content analysis. “no we aren’t sending everything the microphone picks up to our servers, of course not. just the transcript that your local stt model made of it, you won’t even notice the bandwidth!)”
I don’t know. I’m typing this in a razr 40 ultra with a shattered outer screen. on one hand, it sucks that it’s shattered. on the other hand, I’m happy it has a second screen as a point of redundancy?
Are you using PersistentVolumes? If your storage class supports it, looks like there’s a volume snapshot concept you can use, have you looked into that?
Not sure what you’re doing, but if we’re talking about a bog standard service backed by a db, I don’t think having automated reverts of that data is the best idea. you might lose something! That said, triggering a snapshot of your db as a step before deployment is a pretty reasonable idea.
Reverting a service back to a previous version should be straightforward enough, and any dedicated ci/cd tool should have an API to get you information from the last successful deploy, whether that is the actual artifact you’re deploying, or a reference to a registry.
As you’re probably entirely unsurprised by, there are a ton of ways to skin this cat. you might consider investing in preventative measures, testing your data migration in a lower environment, splitting out db change commits from service logic commits, doing some sort of blue/green or canary deployment.
I get fairly nerd-sniped when it comes to build pipelines so happy to talk more concretely if you’d like to provide some more details!
Right. So why does my phone also need to be a part of surveiling others?
I use these two vim plugins for the same functionality without leaving $EDITOR:
I’ve also started dabbling with using fzf in scripts for the team to use. Don’t sleep on the --query
and --select-1
flags!
is that more or less cursed than cat image.img > /dev/whatever
?
dd if=image.img of=/dev/disk/flashdrive
is usually all you need
I personally disabled the feature on my phone when it popped up as available. I don’t have much of an interest in contributing to a weird surveillance network.
Definitely not what you’re talking about, but still: https://www.destroyallsoftware.com/talks/a-whole-new-world
Be careful, if you get a .pizza
, you are only legally allowed to spend the donations on pizza.
just to give you the term to search for, these types of applications are called snippet managers. for example, https://snibox.github.io/
there’s a ton of them around. I don’t have a particular one that I recommend, since it’s not something I use in my workflow.
grep -r
exists and is even more faster and doesn’t require passing around file names.
grep -r --include='*.txt' 'somename' .
Better than that, git config supports conditional includes, based on a repo URL or path on disk. So you can have a gitconfig per organization or whatever, which specifies an sshCommand and thus an ssh key.
Once you have your list, check out fdroidcl so you can get it all installed from your laptop via adb
yep. they’re still here. they got smaller, and we call them “tracking pixels” now.
it’s just an image, which, server side, you can count the number of times it got loaded. easy to embed and no js required.
That’s interesting, okay. Is svn doing compression of those binaries for you?
Not to say “you’re holding it wrong”, but I’m curious about your workflow here. You clone these binaries every time you come back to a project?
John Oliver take on it https://youtu.be/gYwqpx6lp_s