OAuth (OIDC) still makes a lot of sense in some scenarios. I work at a university and I just used Authlib a few months ago to consume our single sign-on, and let me tell you, that was much easier than using the API would have been.
I am in love with this trend of replacing old school unix utilities with new rust projects that stay just as fast or faster, but increase the usability or feature set tenfold. rg, fd, exa, bat, and now tuc.
Don't forget syntax highlighting shortcomings. Sublime, VS Code, Syntect, Pygments, and other highlighting engines all get most languages right. Emacs and vim both do weak and incomplete jobs identifying tokens. It makes nice color schemes look bland because they skew toward only a few colors. At least neovim is working on treesitting which should improve this ability.
I'm a soon-to-be CS BSE looking for a junior software engineering role starting in May. I spent 6 years as a Rails developer, but went to school to help me pivot to systems programming. I want a job that will help me grow my security and distributed systems knowledge.
When you explain what Net Neutrality is, an overwhelming majority of people supported it, including republicans. This isn't just a tech-literate liberal issue.
Pieter Levels wrote pretty much the same thing a few days ago, but most people that know about Pieter know he likes to automate things. I'm pretty sure he set his up as a cron job.
That's an integral part of how it works. Their sync servers download your email, then sync with your local client. You need that ID to log into their server and access your individual email accounts.
I was totally fine wandering around aimlessly until my phone buzzed, but they also took out battery saver mode. I never even found out about the existence of maps until they were banned. Removal of such a benign, yet helpful feature as battery saver mode is what made me quit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_carbon_di...