> Solved problem no 174 in my software
> Push to prod, build runs fine, release
> Finally, all problem solved
> Relax, weekend, go do stuff with my wonderful wife and kids
> Monday, back to work
> 296 new problem
> Solved problem no 174 in my software
> Push to prod, build runs fine, release
> Finally, all problem solved
> Relax, weekend, go do stuff with my wonderful wife and kids
> Monday, back to work
> 296 new problem
👉😏👉
The really scary thing is probably the malicious npm dependencies. If I think about the projects at work with and all the different packages and the hundreds of dependencies no one knows. And it’s probably even worse in really big companies like Microsoft or Facebook, they probably got thousands across their products. I hope for us all that they scan them very regularly.
No, it’s the same incident but it was another guy called Vernon Unsworth, I think he was the head of the operation whereas the one in the article was “just” one of the guys on the team providing medical aid.
I’m also glad that the article does not mention Musk and his whole stupid PR stunt at all but instead focuses on the people actually involved.
Really had to do a double take. Like, what the fuck, the ocean is boiling, it can’t be that be that bad, right? Then it clicked that you’re using that weird Fahrenheit system.
Yes, sorry, it’s weird. Celsius is easy - water freezes at 0 and boils at 100 and there we go…
Use Browser extensions to block all ads and trackers, don’t log in to your account. As an anonymous IP visiting the site you’re almost useless for them because you give them almost no data to sell to advertisers.
Works best with Firefox and uBlockOrigin and some tracker blockers like Privacy Badger. Also works on mobile since Firefox on mobile also supports extensions, however, the Reddit mobile experience is trash, whether you are in a browser or use their shitty app.
Okay, cool, but isn’t that a certain North Korean dictator in the thumbnail? Why???