Rest of the world: most of us figured out how to use credit as a tool without tumbling into a spending pit. Takes a bit of discipline, sure but not impossible.
"I use debit because I can manage my finances" reads as "I don't trust myself with credit." If credit is a trap you have to avoid, that's not the flex you think it is.
It's a tool. Some people use it. Some people are scared of it.
> I'm in a hiring position, and I would blacklist any candidate that wasted my time like this.
> It's childish and just adds to the current state of Gen Z making it impossible to hire them (and then complaining they can never find a job).
This is an unacceptable interviewing posture. As a Bar Raiser (or whatever your equivalent is) with authority over interview standards and interviewer eligibility, I’d pull you from loops for retraining. Repeat it, and you’re removed from interviewing.
> Show the fact that the EU made the decision to not have this feature instead of apple.
It is thanks to EU regulations, which are literal facts in front of us. That’s why the feature isn’t shipped in the EU, because of EU’s own choices. At this point it’s clear you’d rather ignore that, so no reason to keep engaging. One last time: this is on the EU, not Apple.
One last time: this is on the EU, not Apple. The feature works everywhere else. You’re mixing up feelings with facts, and it shows in this rant. Take a breather.
Each time I've seen this type of article make the news cycle it's as follows:
- Apple does X against small / indie developer! I know it makes for a great headline.
- Indie developer did no harm, rights a heart tugger of a blog post.
- Post reaches front of HN, reddit, etc ...
- Further digging shows not only did the indie developer not follow guidelines, they blatantly ignored them.
- Indie dev is exposed for not following Apple guidelines.
The way the issue is written makes it seem a considerable amount of information is being hidden. I'm going to wait until the dust settles before I take any sides.
Since it's my own CA, I have a few personal scripts that handle it. Everything else (like the root cert) is handled offline with a different physical device. It's nothing more than some glorified bash stuff and pulling public CA's from my own sites.
XCA is a gui for dealing with making certs. For me even as a technical user, i prefer it more than CLI.
I've used XCA [1] before for managing my personal CA and PKI certs for things. I simply then share my root CA out to my necessary end points and handle things from there.
"I use debit because I can manage my finances" reads as "I don't trust myself with credit." If credit is a trap you have to avoid, that's not the flex you think it is.
It's a tool. Some people use it. Some people are scared of it.