Gravity is desire
✍️ Hobbyist Writer, 🎲 Role player, 🧩 Game master, 🚀 Sci-Fi enthusiast, 💫 Star Citizen 🇪🇺 EU Citizen, 🐧🦊 Linux user, 🧑💻 Professional Software Developer, 🏳️🌈 they/them
Gravity is desire
Shouldn’t it then be the Linux triplets? Linux, OpenBSD and macOS?
ominous chanting begins followed by clapping wood against heads
You realise that the modlog is public right? Learn from your mistakes and read up on the rules.
OP calls Ubuntu Pro ransomware. That’s all.
Is it ransomware when it’s free?
Rice cookers. It’s super low tech but works great to cook perfect rice.
You heard our concerns? No fuck you, you will hear from the EU suckers!
And Xenia is the messiah of…?
yeah, messing with apt
just to push a service really doesn’t sit well. And they don’t stop there, snaps are preferred over apt packages in Ubuntu Land.
remember when Canonical pushed Ads in Unity? That commentator remembers.
Falkon on my Surface Go and Firefox on my Desktop.
It does now, since February this year. And yes it does show an auc prompt.
sure thing buddy, and never feel discouraged to ask “stupid questions”, it’s how we learn after all :)
but rather a raw binary sequence, e.g., the first 24 bits of an IP address, therefore allocating 3 bytes of memory for storing the NID.
That would require dynamic memory allocation, since you can never know what CIDR your stack encounters. It could be a nibble, a byte, a byte and a nibble, …, 4 bytes. So you would allocate a int32/int64 anyway to be on the safe side.
But why do we need the bitwise AND for that, specifically? I understand the idea, but would it not be easier to only parse the IP address string of bits only for the first n bits and then disregard the remainder (the host identifier)?
Essentially it boils down to:
bit operations are stupid fast and efficient, String operations are super slow.
Also, IP addresses are always stored as int32/int64, so applying String operations would require them to be converted first.
Depends, do you trust Apple with your privacy? And how about Amazon, do you trust them?
The Ads position:
Yeaaaah fuck off Mozilla, we don’t want Ads.
They Slogan
I guess that’s no longer the case then?