I think I'm just getting old, but I thought AV1 was still new too. Do I even own any devices that can decode it? I'm not sure I've even got h265...
psycotica0
Sorry, I'm team gold. We're real! I've never seen blue in the original image.
These answers will be theoretical, because it's possible some browser or system will do things stupid and negate these positives:
It shouldn't make things less anonymous, because different websites get unique passkeys made for them. This also makes them more secure, because if one site has a complete DB leak, that doesn't impact other sites at all.
Also, the passkeys are used for auth, so there's already no "anonymity" here, you're logging into a website. They know who you are, at least which user you are, maybe not which human, which is as true as it was before with passwords.
Also they should require your device to ask you if you want to use the passkey, they're not supposed to be automatically leaking to every site you visit without your knowledge.
Also, they are not stored via cookies. Unless you mean the login session, in which case that part is stored via cookies, but just the same way that a password login gets a session key via a cookie to use after you've logged in. So if someone can steal your cookies that's already a huge problem, but they don't get any extra information with passkeys. The actual secret material for a passkey is stored outside of the browser entirely.
The biometrics aren't supposed to leave the device, they're prompted for by the hardware on the device asking if you'd like to allow the keys to be used. The browser asks the passkey hardware "I'd like to sign this thing please" and then the hardware pops up the biometric thing as part of its decision making process on whether it should do that or not. Crucially this is not the website asking for biometrics, it's your device. And if you unlock it, then it chooses to sign what it was asked to sign, and all the browser gets back is the signature.
In theory.
To anyone reading this that's red-green colourblind, the joke is that the word "Red" is green coloured, and "Green" is red coloured.
I've encountered it very little, but when I encounter it it's because I try to do something and it doesn't work. So I check the permissions with ls -l, and it all seems reasonable. Huh, this should work. Try again, nope. Hmm. 20 minutes of trying random variations, strange results. Oh fuck, is this SELinux? Shit. Where do those configs exist again? How do I configure that? Google "SELinux cheat sheet" hmmm, I don't have enough context to use that, Google "SELinux getting started". Read tutorial, try to skim just enough to figure out what's going wrong for me.
So I don't hate it, I just haven't ever had a use for it, but it has surprised me in a bad way before and cost me a lot of time and confusion, but I've never spent the time getting familiar because I've never had a use for it. And it comes up rarely enough I never remember anything about it by the time it bites me. I can't even recall now what I was trying to do the last time I bumped into it.
My useless brain read the title as "Giant Worm", and then I saw the cover and thought "okay, that's clearly the octopus back there, so is she supposed to be a worm? That has got to be the laziest, most fan servicy bullshit worm costume I've ever seen"
Then I read the summary hoping she wasn't the worm, and then was confused about why it didn't mention a worm at all! I figured it out, eventually...
Huh, that's some fun psychology. Donations make me feel guilty and uncomfortable 😛
Good to know someone enjoys them!
To be fair, I have the same problem when my wife is telling a story about her and her friends doing something. It's all "the she told her that she wasn't going to do that anymore" and I have to stop her and be like "wait wait, who told who that who wasn't going to do what anymore!?" 😅
I agree that "they" being plural sometimes too adds another dimension of figuring out what the girls were doing as a group rather than a girl was doing, but it's honestly already a shitshow. And (while I love my wife) made worse by a person who... maybe doesn't have their audience's interests in mind while telling a story. Because a well told story is structured to maintain a consistent use of pronouns and reintroduces by name when required. So, like, if we're talking about Carmen's story, she gets to be "she", and then you tell me how "she said to Joan, that Tabby had blah blah blah". That's a little bit the orator's fault.
New plan, we have first and second person pronouns (I and you), I think we need 5 new pronouns that correspond to "third person", "fourth person", "fifth person", etc.
And those can be gender non-specific, because the same problem happens when a guy is telling a story involving multiple guys. Then it can come up in the grammar that "Johnny was talking to Peter, and A told B that Richard was mad at A because C didn't go to B's BBQ."
Problem solved 😛
To devil's advocate in a different direction, most projects aren't setup to actually do anything with donations. They could be, like if they had a stable income source they could hire people full time as a job rather then relying on volunteer time. And some of the larger projects are already at that point, and so maybe having more money would allow them to expand the team further. And some projects have a particular goal they're trying to fund, like an external security audit, or some kind of certification process.
But for most projects, sporadic donations are like "hey cool, I guess. I'll go out to dinner tonight" gifts of appreciation, because up until they become a solid full time wage, they're not a solid full time wage. And once they are a solid full time wage, any further donations are like "hey cool, I'll go out to dinner tonight" until they're big enough to be a second wage 😛
I'm not saying we shouldn't donate stuff, gifts of appreciation are still appreciated, I'm sure. But they don't produce output.
Hmm. I've been in math, computer science, and computer programming for 20 years in English (Canada) and I've never heard "denary". It's cute, but never once heard anyone say it. So they're not interchangeable to me 😛
Right, but here's the trick: I can't do the same thing twice. So if I write it ugly the first time, that's the best that's ever going to be. What a waste of its potential! 😅




Yeah, I think it's just the way the blog post was written. When I was reading it I saw the first few paragraphs was basically "here's how to do Cron with it", and then everything after that was "here's a bunch of other features it has that cron doesn't and how to use those"
I don't think that's the wrong way to write this kind of article, but I could see it feeling overwhelming on a skim, because it may feel like you need to read the whole thing in order to get anything working. But actually only the start was necessary, and the rest was tasty feature pitch.