- No, because you can install and configure the firewall before you install package X. (without knowing anything about X, your firewall defaults can just prevent X from doing anything)
But you can't (easily) configure package X itself before you install it; and after you install it, it runs immediately so you only get to configure it after the first run.
- The library developed and used by 3blue1brown [1] is open-source [2] and seems to fit the same use case. I don’t know about widely-used, though.
[1] https://3blue1brown.com [2] https://github.com/ManimCommunity/manim
- I have worked through a significant portion of the GPS one, and I learned a lot. I didn't do it in one go, though. Learning takes time.
- Below the first video, it says:
> Images were captured using a combination of confocal and two-photon microscopy, live imaging isolated mouse ovarian follicles.
- By "hearing" words, sentences, dialogues in their mind. Just like imagining a picture, but audio instead.
- Hetzner VPS hosts have 10 GBit links.
- The path from source code to distributed binary file is known to be a blind spot.
Removing that blind spot is either Harder Than You'd Think or Easier Than You'd Think, depending on your perspective and expectations. You can find some issues listed here:
https://reproducible-builds.org/docs/
Or the homepage of reproducible-builds.org for a general take on the subject. (I am not associated with that website.)
- Even more interesting is the software that does SELECT * FROM just to display two rows.
- Doesn't seem more convoluted than any other drawing tool to me. The UI of Monodraw appears to be pretty similar to "regular" drawing software.
- On desktop, my favorite text editor plus my favorite file browser. On Android, Markor.
- Since they are the owners, they can do what they want with it no matter the license. The license only says what others who get a copy of the software can do with it.
- If you used docker run -p 5434:5432, this port is accessible from your network, not just your local machine. Couple that with an IPv6 uplink to your ISP (i.e. typically a gobally reachable IP address for your machine) and a disabled firewall in your home router, and that's one possible way how this could have happened. Of course, home router firewalls are not usually disabled. But it's a possibility.
- > Of course youre up to date with what you last fetched - that is _always_ the case.
But that is not what this message is about. It's confusingly worded, as many people agree, but what it says is that your local ref "main" points to the same commit as your local ref "origin/main." It says nothing about "main" on the other computer/server.
And it is not the case (i.e. you are not up to date with origin/main), for example, when you have committed to main but haven't pushed. It is also not the case when you have fetched but not merged.
- > Or to use the name git gives to that concept, "refs." Thus reflog :)
A command name that I read as re-flog for the longest time :D. I really wondered about the strange, strange name for quite a while before I bothered to look up what it does and found out that I should read it as ref-log and that it is, indeed, a very useful thing.
- I like to read it as The Fine Article.
- That is correct. And still, many, many devs and admins would do exactly that. Which is why in many, many cases, Tofu really isn't Tofu but "trust whatever."
When designing or evaluating security, one should not ignore that this is a part of reality.
- Retreating?
- Things like this can be highly family-specific. A friend of mine (German) says that in his family, his grandmothers are distinguished as "Oma" and "Omi". Which are both generic German words for any grandmother, but in his family, they are more specific. Like names. Another friend, they used "Oma" and "Großmutter" (a third generic word) to distinguish the two.
So there must certainly be families in the English-speaking world where kids commonly say "dad's dad" and "mom's dad". Even when unlike in Scandinavian languages, it's not the canonical form.
- In Scandinavian languages, gammel or a similarly-spelled cognate means "old". I dont know about rare cases where it might mean "rotten", I dont speak any of them well enough. But in German, "gammeln"/"vergammelt" doesnt mean old. It means to rot/rotten.
https://www.pdflabs.com/tools/pdftk-server/