

The core of the problem trickles down to weak CI/CD configurations that grant pull requests (PRs) more permissions than they should have.
How exactly do their competitors like codeberg do better in preventing that?


The core of the problem trickles down to weak CI/CD configurations that grant pull requests (PRs) more permissions than they should have.
How exactly do their competitors like codeberg do better in preventing that?


That’s a funny way to spell "our 401k"s.


In this analogy Darrell fires an ICBM, because everyone has access to a ton of those for $20/mo.
The overall point is that doing (what used to be) the bare minimum is no longer even close to enough. To be considered adequate, you need super ironclad defense, because even low skilled attackers have access to very powerful weapons.
Does it have to be an SBC? I’ve had great success with a second hand Lenovo Thinkpad


The problem is that nobody enjoys porting bugfixes to old LTS releases and thus won’t volunteer to do it.
So, you either have to use some Enterprise OS that you pay a license to make people do it, or just miss out on bug fixes.
KDE community stopped releasing LTS versions when they realized they were doing the latter.


Bookmarked. Will keep in mind if I ever need a DAM tool.


Odd. I thought he was gay.
I know there’s no rule saying gay people can’t rape people.
But for some reason, my brain reacted with “Odd…” 🤔


I’m a little confused about this thing’s use case.
What does it do differently/better than OpenCode ?


Dunno about Europe, but if anyone is reading this from America, here you go:
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=dell+optiplex&_sacat=0&_sop=15&rt=nc&LH_BIN=1
They are a little more expensive than the last time I looked, but still cheaper than raspberry pi.


I started using games on whales a while back and never looked back


That… still doesn’t explain what’s happening
Hah! They don’t care about “builders” or users. They care about business. Specifically large enterprises the have too many people to care about a single employee’s individual productivity.
Microsoft caters mostly to them and is quite good at that.
But if you’re an end user, gamer, or individual consumer, just move to Linux already. They don’t care about you.