Love it, I discovered it last week and bought a supporter pack after two days!
Everytime I get stuck I'm 100% sure you made a mistake... Until I find my own mistake
Thank you so much! Indeed, it's quite tempting to blame the game, but the algorithm that ensures all valid deductions are enabled hasn't been wrong a single time since it was finished in June. Often I don't believe it myself, but it always turns out to be smarter than me!
Exactly. This workflow step takes a rather important secret and sticks it on a VM where any insufficiently sandboxed step before or after it can exfiltrate it.
GitHub should instead let you store that key as a different type of secret such that a specific workflow step can sign with it. Then a compromised runner VM could possibly sign something that shouldn’t be signed but could not exfiltrate it.
Even better would be to be able to have a policy that the only thing that can be signed is something with a version that matches the immutable release that’s being built.
It's the game that made me stop using cheats. I was young and discovered cheat codes and used them in every game that made them available.
I remember completing Deus Ex and finding it "just ok", but then I read how people talked about it, and realized that taking away the challenge from games was making them worse!
Never used one again, aside from when I discovered Cheat Engine, which was amazing for somebody who was starting to get interested in programming.
I opened the level file I was currently in and filled a room with every weapon upgrade and skill booster. Then put bosses outside the door, saved, loaded the game. If I could get in, I could have the stuff.
Kids these days don’t have access to edit their games like we did. It’s why crafting games are popular, the only “level editors” that remain once companies realized they could monetize extra content.
I have an xcover 6 pro with dual sim, 3.5 jack, removable battery and micro sd support, it works great (except buying an original battery is not super easy). I know the 7 is out too but I think its reviews were worse on amazon
It wasn't required by law and the ocpp charging protocol, used to manage charge sessions at a high level between the charger and the service provider (not the vehicle) did not include payments management. Everybody just found it easier to manage payments using apps and credits. But I think Europe is going to make it mandatory soon(ish)
There's an official Golang rewrite called dendrite: https://github.com/element-hq/dendrite
it has few start because they recentyl migrated it from the original repo (https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite)
Development is not fast but it's going on, and it's currently on beta. I haven't tried it, I selfhost a synapse server which I used with friends, and with docker it wasn't hard to set up/maintain after the initial effort.
Only the Apache-licensed version is dead. The commercial arm (Element) forked it and relicensed it under the AGPL to make sure nobody but them can use their post-fork changes commercially. (Element demands you sign a CLA to contribute. Don’t[1].)
I mean, for years Dendrite was positioned, by the developers of Synapse themselves, to become Synapse's successor, and Dendrite was getting a ton of funding and attention to make sure it happens.
It didn't then, and now that the situation is dire for Dendrite (with no funding and no official effort being put into it), I have little hope things are going to improve.
Very easy to set up (without the Docker nonsense, it's just a binary that is trivial to build), but the real work was in maintaining it. After the third case of database table inconsistencies from joining large public rooms (or perhaps from upgrading it, or a combination) I regretfully had to give up on it. It was time consuming to find out the table structure being used and how to manually correct the data so that it would start again. People were generally helpful on irc but it's just not fun work and feels a bit unnecessary.
Bazzite was built as a "plug and play" distro to play games on steam, I think their main handheld target is the Steam Deck which has a 7.4 inches display
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