If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.
That’s the thing, it is broken and there is a fix desperately needed. C lacks memory safety, which is responsible for many, many security vulnerabilities. And they’re entirely avoidable.
If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.
That’s the thing, it is broken and there is a fix desperately needed. C lacks memory safety, which is responsible for many, many security vulnerabilities. And they’re entirely avoidable.
I use the assistant, because it has so many models to choose from. I hope they can make a mobile app for it in the future
I’ve found Kagi has been good enough to justify the subscription price. I like that I can block certain sites, pin and promote others. It has some neat AI features but they only activate when requested and never replace actual results.
Depends on if you want your data format to be strict ascii. If you don’t care, then sure, why not?
You can still freely use /
in branch names. Having remote branches available as remote/branch
is just a convenience, and you can delete or modify them locally. It’s common to use /
in branch names, too.
Well I’m sorry that you got shitty responses like that. Which platform(s) was this on?
Can you be more specific? I’ve had nothing but great experiences from the rust community.
You can request it but no manufacturer is going to give it to you, nor would they have any obligation to.
The architecture being open source or not has nothing to do with security. All high performance risc-v cpu designs are proprietary. The instruction set itself is open source, but beyond that you have as much visibility into the internals of the processor as you would with an Intel one. The only thing the license impacts is that you can legally make your own risc-v processor if you want, whereas tou can’t make your own x86 processor if you want (legally).
UEFI exists on arm and windows on arm devices can boot other OSes through it just like on x86.
Personally if I ever decide to host an instance I would prefer to do it on aarch64.
If it’s anything like ChromeOS, it’ll be a VM where you can do whatever you want, within that VM.
How often are you doing work on another computer? You probably have like 1-3 you use on any regular basis, just set them up and forget it.
This is just… super wrong. RCS is more open than iMessage by virtue of being supported on two different platforms from different vendors. Doesn’t really mean it is fully open, it’s not, but 2 is more than 1.
Or just a u64. 64 bit computers are pretty standard nowadays.
Why is it so important that you can see the specs of a watering system controller when logging in?
Here’s a different perspective on Safari: it’s the largest competition to Chrome there is. It’s the only relevant one, really. Apple forces iOS users to use Safari (or at least WebKit), and that’s the only thing standing in the way of Chrome/Blink having >90% market share. Safari alone stops Google from dictating the web. Firefox is great and I love it but it’s got like 3% market share and is itself funded by Google. Hence I think Safari is really important in maintaining an open web, even if that’s not why Apple is incentivized to force it on users. I know web devs also hate it but requiring they put in the effort to support Safari is what an open web is all about.
I’m very aware that there is less choice and have run into the various related issues. Ultimately it’s still been a positive experience, despite that.
That’s new mexico
Pre-commit hooks can’t be installed automatically and most people won’t even know they exist.