I am actually very much in favor of Active Speed Limiting. From a safety perspective and in order to make driving less attractive in comparison to public transportation and other alternatives.
AFAIK, the code of the network "plugin" is dynamically loaded, but the version string is hardcoded in Bambu Studio. The analogy is not exactly right IMO; the browser is not restricted to a specific website or a specific version of that site.
I had a similar experience. Until I started exercising, I had very bad pain in my shoulders and neck from too much desk work. Every couple of weeks I would develop a "stiff neck". I also had pain in my wrists occasionally.
Lifting weights for one hour twice a week has alleviated my problems completely. I feel healthier than ever!
> A circular economy of crypto does exist - it’s small vs. the speculation, but people do receive crypto and spend crypto without ever cashing out to fiat.
Can you provide examples that do not involve extortion or drugs?
I overheard a conversation just this morning where a young man was explaining to his friend that he was from Chzechnya, not Czechia. This apparently resolved a lot of questions for the friend.
I did not know that protocol ossification was a such a thing. Thanks for the link, it's an interesting article.
It says that middleboxes near the edge are more likely to be the cause of ossification. Are there any stats about that? Such as some manufacturers or software companies "infringing" on the end-to-end principle more often than others?
Frankly, I am a bit disappointed with the article. I fail to follow the argument that an encrypted header makes it easier to adopt HTTP/3 & QUIC because middleboxes cannot see the header. With HTTP/1.1 & TCP, the middleboxes should not be changing the TCP packets anyway, no?
Also, the author does not point out that QUIC builds on UDP instead of directly building on IP like TCP does.
Effectively as in "they have the same effect". The difference was stated in the comment that you replied to: One is for general memoization, the other just for functions. You can use useMemo exclusively if you prefer.
I am actually very much in favor of Active Speed Limiting. From a safety perspective and in order to make driving less attractive in comparison to public transportation and other alternatives.