Oh yeah, 100%
No, that’s the entire curriculum […]
I was asking about what country has US meddling as a considerable fraction of the curriculum
Oh yeah, 100%
No, that’s the entire curriculum […]
I was asking about what country has US meddling as a considerable fraction of the curriculum
Which country?
In Brazil there have been several pretty important meddlings, but at most the schools say that there where “several parties involved”
Like our dictatorship, where I’d only learnt “other countries incentivized the coup”
o, a, os, as for “the”
um, uma, uns, umas for “a”
both lists mean: singular masculine, singular feminine, plural masculine, plural feminine.
and if the gender is unknown or mixed you use the masculine
Why would 2580 be common?
that makes sense
but in this case, the bank, or whatever good site, would probably not even allow non-TLS connections
and if the mesh necessitates TLS only on an exit node*. Then yeah, that’s a stupid and flawed network. And it also wouldn’t be transparent (in the sense of using just like a normal ISP)
*I’m not sure how it connects to the rest of the internet, but assuming there are exit nodes that connect to other networks
Why would you not use TLS to connect to sites on a mesh network?
Randy Feltface
TCP is the way that you send information, HTTP is what it means.
The difference, in your case, is the port. You can’t CAN have TCP and UDP on the same port, but you can’t have the same protocol on the same port.
edit: I didn’t knew you could have different transfer protocols on the same port, ty!
Punk rock for kids who can’t skate, by destructo disk
and The power of positive drinking, by ashtrays
Tbh you can play 0h h1 on your phone. A simple level takes 30 some seconds
It’s more goose than duck, but I like it. It’s also pretty fat :)
“Unless it’s renders the product completely
unusableunprofitable, why spend money and fix it?”
I’d say 128 is understandable, but something like 256 or higher should be the limit. 64, however, is already bellow my default in bitwarden
Damm, I legit didn’t knew there bcrypt had a length limit! Thank you for another reason not to use bcrypt
Also rate of the requests. A normal user isn’t sending a 1 MiB password every second
Why are you hasing in the browser?
Also, what hashing algorithm would break with large input?
The problem is that you (hopefully) hash the passwords, so they all end up with the same length.
Oh, I already hated windows, that was just the last straw
I made this one to find binaries in NixOs and other systems
get_bin_path() { paths=${2:-$PATH} for dr in $(echo $paths | tr ':' '\n') ; do if [ -f "$dr/$1" ] ; then echo "$dr/$1" return 0 fi done return 1 }
Then I made this one to, if I have a shell o opened inside neovim it will tell the neovim process running the shell to open a file on it, instead of starting a new process
_nvim_con() { abs_path=$(readlink --canonicalize "$@" | sed s'| |\\ |'g) $(get_bin_path nvim) --server $NVIM --remote-send "<ESC>:edit $abs_path<CR>" exit } # start host and open file _nvim_srv() { $(get_bin_path nvim) --listen $HOME/.cache/nvim/$$-server.pipe $@ } if [ -n "$NVIM" ] ; then export EDITOR="_nvim_con" else export EDITOR="_nvim_srv" fi
Lastly this bit: which if it detects a file and a line number split by a
:
it will open the file and jump to the line_open() { path_parts=$(readlink --canonicalize "$@" | sed s'| |\\ |'g | sed 's/:/\t/' ) file=$(echo "$path_parts" | awk ' { print $1 }' ) line=$(echo "$path_parts" | awk ' { print $2 }' ) if [ -n "$line" ] ; then # has line number if [ -n "$NVIM" ] ; then $(get_bin_path nvim) --server $NVIM --remote-send "<ESC>:edit $file<CR>:+$line<CR>" exit else $(get_bin_path nvim) --listen $HOME/.cache/nvim/$$-server.pipe $file "+:$line" fi else $EDITOR $file fi } alias nvim="_open"
all of my bash config is here