It’s not difficult at all, and many editors and IDEs already support this, making the entire point moot. Just do whatever the style guide says. I’m into PHP and Python so for me it’s spaces all the way.
It’s not difficult at all, and many editors and IDEs already support this, making the entire point moot. Just do whatever the style guide says. I’m into PHP and Python so for me it’s spaces all the way.
There are plenty of public toilets that charge a small fee. Train stations and airports for example. Also at gas stations it’s pretty common. But I have never seen it at a restaurant or bar. Maybe sometimes there’s a sign that says it’s 50 cents for non-customers or something. But never for customers.
From the title of the screenshot I was sure it was going to be about daemons.
Too bad the alternatives suck so much. Vimeo used to be nice. I don’t know where they went wrong.
RMS doesn’t disagree with OSI about the open source definition. He just thinks his Free Software definition is better. But RMS would most certainly not call “source available” software “open source”
Because the OSI has been defining and stewarding open source for 25 years. It is the de facto definition and has been recognised as such by multiple governments around the world. Anyone trying to muddy the waters is probably trying to sell you their “source available” software as open source.
Most organisations and individuals that disagree with their definition are trying to sell you source available software as open source.
If it’s not OSI approved then it’s not open source. I hate it when companies try to dilute the open source moniker. This is “source available”
I think that vulnerability was a non-issue. Someone could get to your password if they had full access to your machine to run arbitrairy code. But if someone has that much access, it’s already game over.
But yeah, Bitwarden is better IMHO
So, Debian? Named after Debra and Ian (now divorced though)
Yeah, but did it do well on the specific examples from the Winograd paper? Because ChatGPT probably just learned those since they are well known and oft repeatef. Or does it do well on brand new sentences made according to the Winograd scheme?
How does ChatGPT do with the Winograd schema? That’s a lot harder to fake: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winograd_schema_challenge
I have a Reolink doorbell. PoE or wired power, SD card local storage, onvif and rtsp support. There’s a cloud (no subscription) but you can disable it if you want. I run it fully local with Home Assistant and Frigate NVR. Works like a charm.
Exactly, I have given up on hosting my own. I now just pay for a decent email provider.
I like gnome. My only gripe is that workspaces should be per-screen. But all Linux DEs aside from a few isoteric tiling WMs get that wrong.