Maybe write an anonymous tip to those authors to let them know what’s up
Maybe write an anonymous tip to those authors to let them know what’s up
It sounds like you went to Little Caesar’s.
I’ve got the station that empties the Roomba and it actually takes forever to completely fill (I run it often too).
Not saying you should buy a Roomba; if I could go back in time I’d probably get a Roborock due to the S9+ having atrocious navigation and constant strange errors (“battery not found”).
What is this, 1860? I spent my entire childhood barely touching spicy food, like hell I’d want to go back to that miserable life.
Mrs. Albert Hannaday from The Office
I feel like “dollar” would’ve been smoother than “$3.44” but great rhyme nonetheless.
I started learning HTML at the age of 10 using FrontPage and Word. There were entire utilities dedicated to stripping out Word’s atrocious HTML at the time.
I’ve always wished Markdown was better supported in email. I work with external companies’ APIs a lot where email is the medium, and typically I use a Windows monospace font for code snippets (I’m on macOS but there are a handful of monospaced fonts that work on both).
It’s very clunky, and I wish the backtick notation would work out of the box. Whoever decided HTML in email was the way to go should be shot.
Plot twist: his penis is literally 6’4”
I can’t tell if the author is being repetitive to make the article longer or if it was written by ChatGPT.
IPv6. Stop engineering IoT junk on single-stack IPv4, you dipshits.
Amen
“Now with Flipper for Neuralink with Variable Shortwave Radio Interface you won’t need to carry a clunky device to communicate with legacy iLink security systems”
The large soda is always a Diet Coke. Working in fast food, I learned the “add mayo, add bacon, extra cheese, no lettuce, no tomato” crowd always complements their order with a huge diet cola.
How do you know?
At a high level it involves a terrible custom parser written in Ruby for several formats of DNS blocklists. It finds the proper domain then outputs a large configuration file for Unbound.
I’ve attempted to Dockerize it but honestly, I think it would be better to use a superior parser written in another language that can be statically compiled.
I was using Fly.io to host it in various regions using an Anycast IP, but since I’ve moved onto using VPN for everything I’ve moved it to a few hosts acting as Tailscale exit nodes. Those exit nodes provide the blocking DNS service along with rewriting incoming Tailscale client traffic to route out of another network interface assigned to a VPN provider.
Had I unlimited free time I’d rewrite the parser in Crystal, but part of me thinks there’s got to be something already written by someone in Go.
I found it weird he complained about “how can anyone afford this?” referring to the tickets.
First off, they’re supposed to be high to enforce the law and secondly how are you complaining about the cost while driving a $300k car around?
It’s a common solution but I do something more involved and manual, but it’s the same concept.
Related: I’m a big fan of Beeper, and they were recently acquired by Wordpress too.
Especially with music, if any of this is plain HTTP (or any other plaintext, non-encrypted protocol) and you live in a lawsuit happy jurisdiction you might end up with piracy letters in the mail.