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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)XA
Posts
2
Comments
1,083
Joined
3 mo. ago

  • So does requiring all users to phone you ahead of time to get a temporary password that's only alive for 20 minutes.... But that's also not done because it's...stupid.

    There are dozens of tools and methods (like jumpboxes) which facilitate the authorization and usage of currently available and time tested tools for usage with environments without reinventing the wheel. Stepping away from the unix philosophy is heresy of the highest degree.

    It's not a problem with the tool, only the plumber.

  • I think rather you missed something. Not once have I said anything about the value of the dollar being China's responsibility.

    I answered your direct question while ignoring the rest of the bullshit you made up without even pointing out that you pulled it from nowhere and it's stupid. I think I did a pretty good job.

  • The same way you do any other project. If you're interested, you go looking. You find my project which has a link to the repo. A link is a link. You're simply fighting over where the link goes to, and I'm pointing out that it's a stupid argument to be had.

  • Github is an important resource.

    And there's dozens and dozens of replacements available. The issue you're speaking of isn't an issue with Github at all. It's an issue with developers.

    If Github going off the map borks your development because PROGRAMMERS can't use anything but Github, you have much bigger problems than you think.

  • If there's one thing you want in a website used by almost 75 million beneficiaries it's a platform hastily put together by a crack team of geniuses--that don't password protect databases--"in months."

    This is gonna go very very very poorly.

  • https://linkding.link/ is what you're looking for.

    Use the bookmarklet or FF/Chrome extension on a page and it saves it to your server to look at later. Add tags, folders, whatever. You can setup newly added links to be un-archived, and old links to be archived, or basically however you want.

  • Maybe the ideological end. I'm talking about the collapse of the dollar--which is synonymous with the US. We're already talking about defaulting on loans, and now our economic competitors are offering safe haven for billions in investments because the dollar isn't in a good place. People generally don't like to flop large sums of money around. If its in dollars, they'll keep it there until there's a reason not to--and vice versa. If confidence in the dollar is low enough that people run to China for investment opportunities to protect their capital, they'll never return to the dollar.

  • I don't understand the obsession in integrating everything with OID services, like Google. People already complain all the time about Google watch-dogging them and then integrate every single service imaginable with their Google account. Shit is just weird to me.

  • I think you're kind of missing the point of OSS. Github could completely fall off the face of the earth tomorrow and nothing bad happens. There are dozens of other platforms to facilitate the development of software online. Github is not the end all be all and in the grand scheme is only a small player.

  • You people fucking suck, stop empowering these shit bags.

    I don't know who the fuck you think you're talking to, but it's sure as fuck not me. So I think you need to learn to read, and then completely re-read my first reply because you very clearly didn't read it, or can't understand it.

    1. Ask them. They're required to tell you the changes.
    2. No.
    3. Depends on what the original agreement said. If it says you're entitled to a refund if they change the terms, then yes. If not (likely) no.