Polishing up your resume and LinkedIn?
aka @JWBananas@lemmy.world
aka @JWBananas@kbin.social
Polishing up your resume and LinkedIn?
Are you okay?
They do. By default the system partition is straight up mounted read-only.
More like SudoExW
Is that… ICQ? Why?
systemctl disable systemd-critic.service
Systemd-init, the core part of systemd, offersa wide range of features surpassing other init systems. More features lead to more bugs and security vulnerabilities.
This is a bad take. Many of systemd’s features improve security significantly. And having all that code in one cohesive place can’t possibly be inherently less secure than the cornucopia of init scripts we used to use.
And if the backup was merged into existing contacts, just take a new one. Then you can purge all contacts instead of trying to sort through the broken ones.
Adversarial interoperability is not exploitative.
c/LostLemmings
I sorry what you did there
They do. Even back in their pre-UEFI days, it was possible to flash BIOS from a properly-formatted USB drive by holding down a magic key combination at power on. But it was not exactly publicized as a supported method.
“What? You don’t want to share this to someone you haven’t spoken to in a year?”
deleted by creator
Human beings who want to speak with other human beings.
I know. It can seem like a strange concept to some people. It’s strange to me that they find it strange.
Holy moly!
“If we don’t have Spotify working properly across Play services and core services, people will not buy Android phones,” Harrison testified.
Google: Sorry, other devs! You just aren’t as important as Spotify!
[I mean, they aren’t wrong. But this does not bode well for them!]
They already did
Clearly this was before Apple became one of the largest advertising companies.
Yahoo and MSN had interop before smartphones existed. AIM and Google Talk (Jabber) as well.
When smart phones took off, Facebook Messenger actually had Jabber support (which also gave it interop with AIM and Google Talk).
The consolidation and walled gardens unfortunately came back later.