True, but building the image is not the same as deploying to production.
True, but building the image is not the same as deploying to production.
Aiming for a future in IT security, I find this branch of computer science somewhat ironic. You basically work to make your future work harder, i.e. you make things more secure, making your job of finding vulnerabilities even more difficult. Still a sucker for it, though
We need an open source smart tag. I recently researched how the landscape has changed and, as an android user, still nothing good in available. I’m not sure if I remember right, but Google’s find my device was supposed to be open source or at least open spec? Might be worth looking into how easy it would be to code a lil firmware for this network myself. As much as I’d love a tag for things I cannot lose, the current options are throwing money away for no actual useful tracking (Samsung), forfeit your privacy (Tile, perhaps others), sell your soul (Apple).
For Android, CalcES. It’s modelled after the Casio scientific calculators, so if you’ve ever used those, the app will come naturally to you. Absolute must-have if you want to calculate anything complicated on your phone.
Hey, that’s why I wanted an explanation! The one I got an a search result made it seem like you can’t install anything.
Can you explain the idea and advantages? Excluding use cases like setting up a laptop for your grandma.
Not at all only. At times you have both IPv6 and IPv4 and other times you can still get IPv4 at no additional cost like when you run your own router or modem. The layperson will be given IPv6 by default, but it’s not the only thing you can get.
I’m a wot?
Oh they certainly do look weird at you when you talk in a different language, no doubts! But the meme asks if the dog would notice a different language of “barks” rather than human speech.
A fifth option there is
Absolutely despise those. The moment it turns spring/summer they get everywhere and try everything to get inside your house.
There are obsidian plugins that export into static pages.
Yes, universal. Many websites, apps, communicators etc. implement a flavour of TeX. They will differ in some more complex features or commands, but your $a^2+b^2=c^2$
will work. And that’s the point. For most times, you’ll just want to communicate some simple concepts.
We could do better, for sure. For example, there’s been some development around Typst, which tries to resolve many of those quirks, annoyances, and inconsistencies that come with TeX. It makes sense, since TeX evolved rather naturally and outgrew what it was initially comprised to be. While I’d love to see Typst come far, for now TeX is something that I take for granted, which perhaps better encompasses my thoughts than the word “universal”.
I just love how universal it is. Sure, it has its flaws, but its strength is how many different applications use it. Once you know how to write TeX, you can express any equation you want clearly and understandably, as opposed to trying to write it with Unicode. Bonus points for how easy it is to add TeX rendering to the web with libraries like KaTeX (my personal favourite) or MathJax. I was able to add TeX support to my blog in 10 minutes.
I’m a bit of a sucker for TeX as might be apparent from my infodumping. If anyone’s as passionate and doesn’t know of it yet: You should try the https://texnique.xyz game. It’s a timed TeX typing game. I can get up to 70-80 points in it fairly consistently :D
Now all I want is inline TeX.
Yet another reason never to go to Arizona it is.
Or he knows something we don’t…
Aperture (Science) Innovators
(The original name under Cave Johnson)
I’ve never seen anyone use the first one in typeset equations. At most handwritten fractions. Second one is useful when you want to explain more clearly what’s happening between now and the other side of the equality. In this case it’s useless, though.
They can be enemy drones, too.