

If the code doesn’t change, the resulting docker image will have the same hash, and a new image won’t be created
https://github.com/jackett/jackett/releases
Jackett is literally just releasing a new version every day
If the code doesn’t change, the resulting docker image will have the same hash, and a new image won’t be created
https://github.com/jackett/jackett/releases
Jackett is literally just releasing a new version every day
The content of the email is very laissez-faire, e.g. "we legally have to send these ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ "
I collect these like pokemon 🙃
Especially because it’s to a newbie, who stands to benefit the most from using an OS with more user share and more available online resources.
It’s not uncommon to see certain sites to only work on chromium because the dev used the filesystem APIs that don’t exist on FF
This seems more like a collection of examples than an actual attempt at a definition.
At its core, AI is a program that takes a given input and returns the output that, during it’s training phase, would be expected to minimize it’s error (or maximize it’s reward).
More, but not way more - they would be licensing window IoT, not a full blown OS, and they wouldn’t be paying OTC retail rates for it.
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You don’t memorize RSA keys
No im saying if your password size is limited to a fixed number of characters, as is the case with RSA keys, words are substantially less secure
“can you string words to form a valid RSA key”
“Yes this is the most secure way to do it”
“No, it’s not when there is a fixed byte length”
-> where we are now
we are talking about RSA keys - you don’t memorize your RSA keys
if you rely on memorizing all your passwords, I assume that means you have ample password reuse, which is a million times worse than using a different less-secure password on every site
Sure but we aren’t talking about that
You memorize your RSA keys?
We are talking about RSA though, so there is a fixed character length and it isn’t meant to be remembered because your private key is stored on disk.
Yes the word method is better than a random character password when length is unbounded, but creating secure and memorable passwords is a bit of an oxymoron in today’s date and age - if you are relying on remembering your passwords that likely means you are reusing at least some of them, which is arguably one of the worst things you can do.
Words are the least secure way to generate a password of a given length because you are limiting your character set to 26, and character N gives you information about the character at position N+1
The most secure way to generate a password is to uniformly pick bytes from the entire character set using a suitable form of entropy
I simply stated that CICO isn’t the mechanism that keto uses.
It literally is though.
When you are in ketosis your CO increases, so even if your CI stays the same you will now be operating at a deficit
I was consuming about 150% of my normal pre-diet Calorie intake and losing 500g per day for a month. CICO is flatout not the mechanic used.
You are stating that without knowing your calories out, and asserting that the laws of thermodynamics aren’t real
Keto works due to two things: 1) proteins and fats are more filling than carbs, and 2) your basal metabolic rate increases when you are in ketosis
It’s pretty common in Canada to be able to order fries with sour cream, green onion, tomatoes, and cheese/queso. (It’s the best thing on taco bells menu and they don’t even have it state-side)
That being said fries are way greasier than a baked potato, and they are better suited to more acidic condiments (ketchup, malt vinegar, etc)
OP said it was to notify you when an alarm went off, not when it ran out of batteries.