What kind of other alternatives would you suggest for command-line image editing ? I tend to use it mostly for conversion, resizing and mosaic… and if there is something widespread, easy to use and faster/more flexible, I'm game. But the command-line part of the requirement is an absolute necessity :)
In the late 1980's, my aunt visited Romania along with some friends who were employed in the US State Dept.
On a side-trip through a rural area, they stopped and my aunt asked a woman if she could take her picture in front of her small, but very well maintained, house. She agreed, and after the picture was taken, she started crying. They asked why, and after some hesitation, the woman explained that she and her family were being forced to relocate to Bucharest, and they would have to abandon the house that her family had lived in for several generations. My aunt got her contact info, and later sent her a copy of the picture.
The price change for large organizations is insane. If you have a private repo with 100 collaborators it will cost you $10800 pr year.
We have 300+ users and 70+ repo's. (Everyone in the company have access to github for internal open source projects etc). We are now looking at $30 000 pr year...
The only way I see this new plan viable is if they only count active users (with commits) each month.
Good and bad. Good for the reason you said, but bad because those emails are 'lost'. Who knows what they could have contained. I hope the FBI can get to the bottom of this because there is probably a lot of sensitive information in them that she is trying to hide. Ugh I want her to get thrown in prison so bad.. but she's gotten out of so much crap so far, so who knows.
Money talks and she's got a ton of it. She's obviously paying off the right people.
Author here. Panopticon grew out of my frustration about the lack of usable implementations of cutting-edge program analysis research and the fact that the industry standard for RE is a proprietary software that looks like Windows 95.
I toyed with the idea of rewriting it in Rust since 1.0 became stable. The whole port took around 3 months. I got the size down from 10.000 to 8.000 loc. Looking back it was the right decision. Programming in Rust is not only more fun, it's definitely easier too. Panopticon used alot sum types that were implemented using boost::variant. Like everything with Boost it kind of worked but was incredible ugly and complex. Replacing them with enums was probably the biggest reason I switched to Rust. Also I found iterator invalidation bugs simply by translating C++ to Rust, thanks Borrow Checker!