I ended up migrating to ebooks.com and importing them into Calibre (after some work to get Adobe Digital Editions to import nicely) and using that to manage my Kindle. Did the same with my old Amazon library too when they were talking about stopping you exporting the azw3's
I’m not going to get the wow of “how did they perform that phrase/melody/rhythm” the same way from music that wasn’t actually performed (ack this doesn’t apply to all genres obviously)
That warning also doesn’t render right on my
iPhone (the buttons are overlapping slightly), and I don’t recall seeing it on other repos. Is it new/bespoke?
For what it’s worth, Trusted Signing verification has been a moving target over the last 12 months. It was open for individuals, then it was closed to anyone except (iirc) US businesses with DUNS numbers, then it opened again to US based individuals (and a few other countries perhaps).
My completely uninformed guess was that someone had done something naughty with Trusted Signing-issued code signing certificates.
Anyway, when I first saw the VeraCrypt thing this morning my initial reaction was “I wonder if this is them pushing developers onto trusted signing the hard way?”
It could be a flag in the per-network CarrierConfig bundle. I imagine that would help with jurisdictions that might require this protocol for legislative reasons
That the original post to HN linked in the blog was done on a throwaway kind of implies a level of awareness (on the part of the dev) that the code/claims were rubbish :)
To name a few (presumably): drivers, proprietary protocols, vendor warranties/support, licensing/relicensing, paying you to do the work, waiting for the work to be done/tested, paying for workforce re-training, justifying this to management etc.
All these reasons suck, but they’re all reality in one industry or another sadly.
There’s also API Sets: where DLLs like api-win-blah-1.dll acts as a proxy for another DLL both literally, with forwarder exports, and figuratively, with a system-wide in-memory hashmap between api set and actual DLL.
Iirc this is both for versioning, but also so some software can target windows and Xbox OS’s whilst “importing” the same api-set DLL? Caused me a lot of grief writing a PE dynamic linker once.
Strong recommendation for Alistair Reynold’s Century Rain if you want another of his. It’s part 20th century alternate history, part hard boiled crime noir, and part hard space opera.
Cutting a long list short, the _best_ thing I read this year was W. Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage.
It’s not a book where the world changes greatly or great things are done, but honestly that’s kind of nice: It’s a compelling story of a life, the characters were engrossing (one in particular stands out for how strongly _dislikeable_ they are) and the I loved the prose.
The standard I arrived at is roughly "would I be sad if, in 15 years, I forgot about this book/piece of music?". If it's something that I enjoyed so much today that I'd be afraid to lose it amongst 10,000's of eBooks or songs on a streaming platform, I physically buy it.
Having a mobile phone is necessary to securing employment, shelter and sustenance in many cases, yet somehow it’s an individuals fault for choosing to have a phone account when a pair of multibillion dollar companies breach that data through lax security practices?