I’ve used and enjoyed Dbeaver CE. It’s FOSS!
I’ve used and enjoyed Dbeaver CE. It’s FOSS!
With added firmware/drivers for better hardware compatibility
I saw a Canadian Goose exhibit at the Prague zoo and almost died laughing.
For your use case, maybe consider Asahi Linux for your Mac and a minimized windows for your desktop for gaming?
Thats awesome that you got that working. I was hoping this would be possible the same way feeding a router a wireguard config is possible
Edit: I’m going to try this at some point in the next few months https://docs.gl-inet.com/router/en/4/interface_guide/tailscale/
Setting up Tailscale on a router is what I’m hoping to accomplish eventually. I want to use my home as an exit node so I can have my home ip while traveling without having a client on my traveling devices.
However companies do other things as well.
Companies sometimes purposefully compress and obfuscate their code to make it hard to unpack. This happens a lot on the web where a website might have code sent to your machine in a format which could have been legible. But before they send it to you, they run the code through a program which adds extra steps, renames things, and reorders things and removes extra spaces… all to make it hard to read.
Some companies will encrypt their code or programs to varying degrees. Some will do it at the storage level, such as DRM or modern disk-based videogames. The data in these games is “locked” behind passwords and keys which can only work if the program “calls home” to Steam or Xbox or whatever and those providers let the game be opened. It’s more complicated than this but that’s the basics.
A lot of companies have moved their code “into the cloud”. That means, instead of giving you a full piece of software, you only get the front-end, or the pictures and words you see on screen. The actual program lives on the company’s servers which you don’ have access to. You only get to send those servers inputs, and they return outputs back to your screen.
Companies can make their code secret from internal developers by breaking programs up into smaller pieces. Say you’re a developer at Apple. You might be assigned on the specific part of the system which opens apps from the home screen and may only get access to that part of the system so if your development machine gets hacked, the hackers don’t know ALL the inner workings of iOS.
I’m sure there are more ways but this is a start.
Please step away from screens for a bit. There are bad things/people in the world. Always have been, always will be. Your comment history has me worried for your sake.
That’ll make you forget about the analyst who left didn’t add a WHERE
clause in their “test” UPDATE
statement
Wow. The NYT will just publish an opinion piece for anything. I learned nothing from reading this
I’m not really a networking expert so I can’t make too good of a guess as to what happened. I’m on the latest Firefox mobile release on Android and was accessing from a Colorado IP. When I originally tried the site, nothing was rendered. It was a blank page or just a redirect for download. I didn’t download the .bin. I clicked your link twice before sending my message.
Your link is not on https and asking me to download a .bin file. Extremely sus
Edit: link looks good now
It’s been awhile since I’ve seen a Stefon sketch. Thanks for the good memories
Another recommendation for this app weather app with great widgets. I’ve been using it for years.
I just stumbled across this Incredible dissection of the VFX in Attack of the Clones
I sure am. Is there a better way? Should I just use the web?
That’s a great idea! I need to look up cross posting rules
This is a really useful writeup because it outlines a simpler installation. It seems like most people post when they have a very special or unique situation.