Try playing around with GLSL shaders! They’re a fun application of linear algebra and have a satisfyingly quick feedback time.
Try playing around with GLSL shaders! They’re a fun application of linear algebra and have a satisfyingly quick feedback time.
Hard disagree. Linear algebra can make pretty shapes and colors from a bunch of vertices, while calculus can make you want to quit school and become a plumber.
Only if you don’t buy the Season 1 Vault-Tec Access Pass for $49.99. Imagine not doing that and then not ever being able to get your Overpowered Armor at pass level 5. You would absolutely be ruining it for yourself by not investing into the seasonal passes.
The “++” in C++ stands for extra verbose.
This assumes front-end development.
From a (dev)ops perspective, if I had a vendor hand me a tarball instead of proper documentation, I’d look very far away from their company. It isn’t a matter of if shit goes wrong, but when. And when that shit goes wrong, having comprehensive documentation about the architecture and configuration is going to be a lot more useful than having to piece it together yourself in the middle of an outage.
For your sake, I hope your employment was agile as well. Those jobs sound like they were dumpster fires waiting to happen.
This seems like common sense, no? Return 403 or better yet reject TCP connections on port 80 entirely.
That initial HTTP request header and body is sent in clear text, and that’s more than enough to leak credentials or other sensitive data.
That part comes when they find a publisher.
EGS? Oh, no. We don’t do that here. We’re more along the lines of:
It’s like scope creep, but where the demanding client is also your boss/coworker.
No no, they’re right. It took some witchcraft and sorcery to pull this incredibly difficult task off.
Adding on to your TLDR: There’s also asymmetric cryptography based on elliptic curves, so it’s not always an exponent of two massive primes.
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Edit: Has nobody actually tried doing this before downvoting? It saves and quits :/
Java isn’t inherently better at running as a distributed system than any other language is. If you want a service that can horizontally scale infinitely, learn Erlang and use the BEAM VM.
“Add support for XYZ.”
No please, no thank you, just a follow-up of “is it done yet?” three days later.
“Your honor, I didn’t distribute distribute CSAM. That was somebody else.” and “Yes, your honor, I did sign that internet service contract agreeing that I am responsible for all activity that originates from my network.”
The emulator itself doesn’t necessarily have to exist only to run retail games. It could be used to develop or debug homebrew and marketed as such. They wouldn’t even need to have decrypted the operating system to understand it, as Atmosphère is a complete reimplementation untainted by Nintendo code.
If it ran retail games as a consequence of being accurate to real hardware, that would just be a happy accident. And as long as the developers don’t acknowledge running retail games and don’t directly assist in fixing them, they have plausible deniability.
This raises the following question: if Nintendo does not respect in the slightest our property rights by pulling such stunts, why should we as end users respect their intellectual property rights?
I’m a big fan of the “buy a game and crack it right after” philosophy. Respect property rights until something is in one’s legitimate possession, and then remove any encumbrances preventing it from being used in the way the purchaser wanted.
They sued under the DMCA, though?
Hmmm, let’s see:
Yeah, I don’t see women lining up around the block for this catch of a human being.