There’s a great “lo” package which implements these JS-like array and map functions using generics in Go. Coming back from a JS/TS job I’ve been really happy to find this.
For those using macOS or iOS, week numbers can be toggled on in the calendar settings! Really useful if you need to frequently reference the week. Unsure about Windows and Android.
Cloudflare forwards DMCA copyright infringement complaints to the hosting provider, probably automatically to an abuse@ domain that it can detect. I’m not sure if they do the same for any other copyright claims, but they do pass it on to the parties that should be involved.
But don't they store the copyrighted content on their servers? It's one thing just to be a transit mechanism it's another thing to store and serve copyrighted material like a hosting a provider.
If someone ships drugs through UPS, and it sits in a UPS warehouse for a few days, did UPS store drugs? Technically yes, but should they be liable for that?
If UPS finds drugs, they call the cops and you are probably better off not having that package delivered. If someone tells Cloudflare they are hosting copyright-infringing content.. they sue to say the Cloudflare service is ineffective and does nothing to provide the infringing content?
Except UPS doesn't find drugs because they don't look for it. Just like Cloudflare doesn't look for illegal content.
If someone told UPS a package has drugs in it, they'd say, "that's nice, talk to the sender" and then deliver the package. If someone tells Cloudflare, "that content is illegal", they say, "that's nice, talk to the site owner".
Usually, people don't tell UPS they have a drugs package, they tell the police directly and the police go and work with UPS. That's the issue with many of these analogies, people don't talk to the car dealership/UPS/landlord/hotel staff/etc, they talk to the authorities because that's the normal thing to do.
In this case, it would be like if you told UPS someone is continuously shipping drugs through their system, and they said 'that's fine they are a paying customer' and continued to let them traffick with their infrastructure, rather than contact the police. At a certain point UPS is complicit and could be charged themselves even.
So what should UPS do? Open a box because someone claimed something potentially illegal is in the box? What if UPS does not have the tools or right to open the container and determine that the thing is actual illegal drugs, do they now need a drugs lab and drugs experts?
Isn't more simple and correct that you contact police directly, present the evidence, have the authorized person to decide if the thing you claim is illegal or that the evidence is convincing then intercept the package.
UPS already doesn't consider their customers packages private property and does in fact open boxes that are deemed suspicious. But even then, cloudflare isn't even doign the latter. They aren't bringing this information to the police, they are continuing to collect money from the phisher and stonewalling OP until he shows up with a lawyer and a much bigger can of worms for them.
You are ignoring my main point, CloudFlare should act for each complaint? Like some Skyrim modder bitches that someone stole a texture from his mod , then what ? An employee starts an investigation to determine who is right?
Like in the case with a website, some dude complains that some other dude stole some css, now you need a detective to find the real author, licenses and then detect if is fair us ... this seems to be a job for police/justice. It is not a clear case like you are hosting an entire Disney movie.
If someone reported it to UPS and they didn’t do anything. UPS would be complicit. Just like if someone sent a CDN a DMCA notice. Justice do prosecute the shipping companies for illegal materials that use their network.
Well, they don’t _not_ store it - their whole dealio is they cache website content on their servers. Not forever, but they’re not just a transit mechanism.
Is the embedding necessarily a bad thing? I run a site entirely using Go templates and packr to embed the site’s files and it only adds a few MB. Latest version of Go has a built-in way to embed files now through a comment syntax.
I know that it can checksum files, search through drivers, scan memory addresses, etc. I think I can read registry keys as well. That’s just what I know of the 2005-2008 era of Warden implementation. See vanilla implementation: https://github.com/vmangos/core/pull/1295
All models do have a high-speed microSD slot similar to the Switch, so you could offload less intense games there. But yeah, I think most will go for the mid tier model. 64GB is low.
But to each his/her own. For some that may be completely sufficient if they’re not playing AAA games.
The studies have only gone on for, at most, 8 months. So for every time period studied so far, including the longest possible time periods, people retain immunity. Perhaps use this science to revise your initial belief/statement.
While I mostly agree, there have been a few rare cases of reinfection; here [0] is a metastudy that looks at several claims of reinfection, ultimately concluding that 6 cases were credible reinfections. So while the relative risk is very low, I think one could make a plausible argument that since the risk of harmful side effects is also low, getting vaccinated may be beneficial.
There is also preliminary evidence [1] to indicate that post-infection vaccination can help to resolve lingering symptoms such as fatigue, breathlessness, and insomnia.
Vaccine-based immunity allows for a greater variance in neutralizing antibodies to form relative to the spike protein, compared to natural immunity attacking less critical vectors. Get the vaccine even if you had covid
Infection is possible with all vaccines as well. Resulting viral load will be what matters: How strong their immune response is, how infectious the re-infected patient is, and how severe their symptoms are.
It's not a binary "You have COVID" vs "You don't have COVID". Not for vaccines, nor for re-infections.
An unvaccinated health care worker set off a Covid-19 outbreak at a nursing home in Kentucky where the vast majority of residents had been vaccinated, leading to dozens of infections, including 22 cases among residents and employees who were already fully vaccinated, a new study reported Wednesday.
Immunity lasts a long time in the vast, vast majority of people. People that survived SARS-CoV-1 still have strong immune response almost two decades later. You are improperly conflating lack of antibodies with lack of immunity, they are not the same thing. Antibodies are the product of active infection, not having immunity.
It is unhelpful and disingenuous to suggest that lack of antibodies imply lack of immunity or that rare edge cases are the norm. In disease, there are always edge cases.
Mac is only getting an updated UI? That’s a huge shame. It’s been out for years and there’s still no C++ support. VS Code is decent if you use Cmake, but the code completion and highlighting is really off compared to native VS.
Is there any decent alternative to a good C++ IDE for Mac besides Clion (which costs money).
Honestly just pony up for CLion. It is actively developed (support for makefiles and arbitrary build systems was just added in addition to the existing CMake) and JetBrains has a super reasonable subscription that lets you keep the last version you had indefinitely if you ever cancel.
I've found that to really get the most value out of Jet rains IDEa you have to go out of your way to discover the built-in features and use them, things like the built-in debugger, git support, find in project, search by symbol, etc. There's a LOT in there and easy to ignore or gloss over.
A way to learn is to take the time to read the tip of the day and try out the suggestion right away. Don't disable the tip of the day. It only takes one minute a day and after about a month you'll have learned a lot.
If you can get used to some oddities, Xcode works well enough for any C++ code you write yourself, or have enough control over to make sure you follow the conventions it expects.
But if you need CMake support within your IDE, CLion's worth it, just get the JetBrains subscription (student or professional) and don't look back. Oddly enough when I last used it, CLion didn't work with Clang-based projects quite as nicely as Xcode (it preferred GCC) but that might have changed since then.
Finally, if you want to support open source, you can try VS Code. It mostly works, but it's not an IDE.
Eclipse CDT also exists, but ... I think the last time I tried eclipse was back in the mid-2000s before RubyMine when there was a Ruby-on-Rails plugin for Eclipse. I haven't looked back since...
A lot of Sweden is already like this. They're a super cashless society currently. I have only lived in Stockholm, but a large number of places will not accept cash in any form. This is done for security and convenience reasons, and most Swedes from what I have seen seem to prefer and like this method. It definitely has implications of course... but none that seem to be bothering the masses.