

I can’t load a stress how bad your proofreading is. Don’t blame that on others.


I can’t load a stress how bad your proofreading is. Don’t blame that on others.
Yeah, just need to make some measurements and plan some things around other planned tattoos.
Shoot me a DM.
I would love a tattoo of this.


Lesbians making pies? Lesbians eating pies? Lesbians made into pies? I’m so confused by this headline.


Axiom Verge. I don’t know how they managed to improve on the feeling of Super Metroid, but they did it.


Quantum encryption will be “broken” the same way as conventional crypto is: side channels. It’s nice to have, but it doesn’t solve the most common attacks.


If money is going to be irrelevant, then he should give his all away right now. Get ahead of that curve.


Today, we remind you that AWS isn’t the only single point of failure on the Internet.


Our long nightmare of commodity hardware and open ecosystems is finally coming to an end!


Funny, I was just reading about this sort of thing in “How to blow up a pipeline”. It’s the sort of argument that seems obvious in retrospect.
When someone in the global south uses a coal stove to cook their food, they’re doing it by necessity. When a billionaire sails out on a mega yacht, it’s pure excess. Yeah, banning them won’t make the difference between 1.5C and 2.0C of global warming, but it’s low hanging fruit.
We can also ban private jets, and the only significant impact to the economy would be that some billionaires have to travel around in first class like some kind of lowly multimillionaire or upgraded plebian.
It does not matter if you think Valve makes good products or not.


Those could both be true. People feel like they need $125k more to be secure, but when they get it, it doesn’t make them as happy as they thought it would. They need another $25k more to feel that way.


All of this is going to be based on the fluctuation of RAM prices and tariffs, as well as whether or not Valve has an existing stockpile of RAM from 6 months ago.
FWIW, Sony just announced a Japan-only PS5, sans optical drive, for about $350. Now, US prices are remaining higher, but the GabeCube is likely to have less performance than a PS5. I can’t see them going much over $600 and still having a value proposition. Even that is going to be based on the gigantic library of Steam games that can be played on it that aren’t on the PS5.


How did Denmark end up being the bad guy in this? Volunteering for the role seems out of character, but who knows.
That doesn’t have anything to do with tax brackets, though.
The solution to assistance services is to have a scale where assistance is backed off slowly until it goes to zero, not have this cliff where you make $1 more than the maximum and you get nothing.


It’s been a very seamless experience with Bitwarden. Pretty much “click passkey, now logged in”.


Most of the sites I’ve seen use it as the single auth source. That said, using multiple forms of authentication in a layered model only improves security.


I use Bitwarden and it syncs it all up between devices.
The biggest annoyance is disabling Firefox’s popovers that tend to cover the Bitwarden popovers.


That’s the root of the problem. Nontechnical people don’t use good passwords, but all the ideas we have for replacing them are only usable by more technically minded people.
There are a variety of other reasons why passwords are bad, though.
So you bring out “this is my second language” after telling someone else “you might want to put more effort into reading”. No, that does not fly. You put “sorry, English is my second language” first. Lashing out like that is not a good look.