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I have all of my important electronics (computers, entertainment center, network equipment) on CP1500PFCLCD. They’re scattered around the house, so there are multiple CP1500PFCLCD.
…then there’s a 22 kW gas generator that handles everything once it switches on.
Playing devil’s advocate, I’d be worried you’d avoid doing work you don’t want to do, but is core work that needs to be done. Not all employers want or are set up to employ wildcards. You may have to make your own path here, too.
The exchange rate is pretty good right now.
Did you just assume my ¥der?
Hashicorp recently changed the license of Terraform and its other core products from MPL to BSL, restricting commercial use and preventing competitors from offering services based on the code. While this makes business sense for the now-public Hashicorp, it upset many users who saw it as undermining the open source nature of the projects. In response, the OpenTF project was launched to fork Terraform and maintain it under a truly open source license. While Terraform is not as likely to cause vendor lock-in as databases, its dominance as a developer tool could be impacted by this change and emerging alternatives. Interestingly, the video ends by humorously discouraging viewers from supporting the OpenTF project in opposition to Hashicorp’s licensing change.
When I was working in the office, I’d put the thermostat where I like it, drink 6 K-Cups worth of something a day, and use so much TP. I hated commuting and made sure I got my money’s worth. They’ll regret bringing people like me back.
I’ve been on Fastmail for 10 years. It’s a great service.
I like black because it accentuates the goofy faces cats make sometimes. I also just like the way they look in general.
Practically, it’s easy to see when there’s something in their fur and when it needs brushing.
As a bonus, they’re easy to adopt. Every shelter seems to have a bunch.
If you’re a developer, read the source code. People will tell you how they remember things working, or how they think they should work. The code is what it is.
It may be more private, but it is not as secure. (On Android).
See https://madaidans-insecurities.github.io/firefox-chromium.html and all of the linked references.
Make a GDPR data request to reddit. You’ll get all your comments and posts and a ton of other stuff in CSV format.
Then the hand-wavy part: use the Lemmy API and write a utility to post things.
But definitely get your data.
Tildes is a non-starter because I’m not cool enough to know anyone to provide an invite.
From one hairy situation to another, in time.
It’s very similar to what JetBrains has and you can easily translate between the two (assuming you aren’t using assertions or any Hurl-specific features), but not exactly the same syntax.
I tend to go with Hurl because it’s self contained and you can do things like throw it in your CI builds.
I use Hurl. Everything is just a text file:
POST https://example.org/api/tests
{
"id": "4568",
"evaluate": true
}
HTTP 200
[Asserts]
header "X-Frame-Options" == "SAMEORIGIN"
jsonpath "$.status" == "RUNNING" # Check the status code
jsonpath "$.tests" count == 25 # Check the number of items
jsonpath "$.id" matches /\d{4}/ # Check the format of the id
This is my favorite Star Trek episode, too. Ruined.
I use Fossil for all of my personal projects. Having a wiki and bug tracker built-in is really nice, and I like the way repositories sync. It’s perfect for small teams that want everything, but don’t want to rely on a host like GitHub or set up complicated software themselves.