

Unreported exploits are recurring income. Why would they help Riot patch the hole their money is coming through for a paycheck that might never actually see?
Unreported exploits are recurring income. Why would they help Riot patch the hole their money is coming through for a paycheck that might never actually see?
No idea what that would look like, but both those devs have great ideas, so I’m interested.
I always thought that is funny, but I think they do that to ensure blank pages aren’t skipped by the printer.
Post the kind of content you’d like to see.
Mastodon, the Fediverse replacement for Twitter, like how Lemmy is the Fediverse replacement for Reddit.
Idk this is my first account, ha.
For an entire 8 days.
a list of hardcoded strings
Violating a core programming tenet right off the bat. I wonder how much money Activision payed for this software…
Calendar as plaintext is cursed.
This headline is terrible. Why would they quote the weird metaphor instead of paraphrasing what it actually means in context?
That kernel level anti-cheat is really working out well, eh?
How such generic features are even awarded patents is beyond me. None of these are even remotely exclusive to Pokemon or Palworld.
EDIT The grossest thing about this is that these patents were all filed this year, meaning they were filed with the exclusive intention of building a case against Palworld. There really is no level to which Nintendo won’t stoop.
I have this issue too, and I figured out a workaround. Deleting the files manually via rm frees up space. Deleting files via qBittorrent via UI or automatically does not.
Turns out the files were just being moved to a “.Trash-UID” (where UID is the UID of the container) folder in the /downloads directory (or wherever that folder is mapped to on your host). Clearing that out freed up the space.
I suspect this is a bug where the “Delete files permanently” setting is not being respected. You might want to set up a cron job to delete that folder periodically in the meantime.
Neat! I should dust it off again. 🐧
Nice try, HR.
Generating good reports is a surprisingly portable skill across most white-collar jobs.
Executives especially love pretty graphs that give them a good sense of how things are working/performing.
Every time I think I understand a household appliance, Technology Connections has a 20-60 minute explaining why it’s more complicated than I thought.
It’s the closest thing to a “perfect” game I can think of. Every new iteration is just fancy bells and whistles on the same perfect core.
This app looks cool in theory, but after about 2 hours acquiring API keys from 3rd party platforms and messing around with the docker-compose.yml, the application cannot connect to the mariadb container–it keeps claiming romm is unauthenticated despite checking the credentials several times.
Judging by my experience and the many stale bugs on this project, it doesn’t look like this is ready.