Security through obscurity isn’t security.
Security through obscurity isn’t security.
Ballsy to use a 2nd language as a sarcastic reply to someone correcting grammar.
That’s not an issue inherent to Firefox and anyone that cares enough to block cookies usually has the know-how of how to re-enable them for a specific page.
It’s definitely a rule that can be taken so far that it is counterproductive, but I think it’s good practice to thbk about how I could use something other than a raw string ( even if it’s just a constant defined somewhere )
He doesn’t want to push at such a late hour. Give him a break.
I’m looking at it with optimism for a new build tool. I just need Sass/CSS compilation and I’ll give it a whirl.
It’s getting into the realm of law where the answer is almost always “it depends”
Everyone has good answers but I would check the license of more obscure libraries to just be sure you’re not violating it. GitHub has a handy feature that explains the license (if one exists) in easy to understand terms. I’ve never ran into this issue myself but it’s a good habit to have. Especially when you’re working for a company.
And keep it that way! We need people on both sides to further spur progress. Plus I’m jealous cause I still don’t have a firm grasp on docker.
Like those platforms aren’t already full of AI garbage as well. Training new models will require a cut-off date before the genie was let out of the bottle.