

We have figured out passwords. Management hasn’t figured out allocating resources to security, and governments haven’t figured out fining the crap out of such companies.
We have figured out passwords. Management hasn’t figured out allocating resources to security, and governments haven’t figured out fining the crap out of such companies.
1357! is even.
I was going to list a whole bunch of things the DETAILS tag doesn’t allow, but it seems that none of these issues actually appear. So either it has evolved since I’ve looked at it last time or I was stupid.
Either way, thanks for talking back.
What’s a native HTML element that mimics Bootstraps Collapse?
It also has lots of UI widgets like collapsing elements, modals and alerts. Sure, you could code all these by hand, but why bother?
Yep, currently looking for alternatives.
Indeed, but I actually like this system: There are no breachable servers between the doctor and the patient, at least a few years ago everyone had a CD drive at home (I know that’s changing), and handing out a disk is way cheaper than a flash drive.
When playing with my friends, we never use the Steam chat. We use Skype.
You can call me Boomer now.
That sounds like slow-ass RAM.
In Germany MRI and CT images are regularly handed to patients on CDs.
The problem is that you have friends. You should put an end to that.
Been there, done that. I’ve learned to be very unique in naming my shit.
You’ve probably already found this answer on the Unix stack exchange, right? https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/761630/how-can-i-make-a-systemd-service-start-after-the-completion-of-another-service
Once you learn about the ubiquitous neck collar all cartoon characters used to have, you can’t unsee it.
I’m sad that I live in a world where people think they need the word “transvestigate.”
Well, I find bootstrap very intuitive, and I don’t have 15 classes on my elements. That’s why I was asking.
Who’s saying you’re using the frameworks correctly?
Isaac Asimov wrote a story about this called “Each an Explorer” (1956)
JavaScript has types and it does have type errors, for instance
> null.foo
Uncaught TypeError: null has no properties
Please stop spouting nonsense on issues you know nothing about.
I’ve never heard of anyone trying to do that. I couldn’t even imagine how a website could detect a password manager.