I’m not buying anything, as I do not need anything.
Software developer interested into security and sustainability.
I’m not buying anything, as I do not need anything.
I understand your project’s constraints. I meant that you could try compiling and running the mongoose server linked against the packed filesystem in your development machine.
It seems to me that the problem would be caused by Mongoose packing, rather than vite/rollup’s build, since it seems to run fine on your development environment.
PS: Could you try reproducing the Problem using a mongoose server running on your development machine, or even better: on a Dockerfile? Then you could share a minimal example that could help to further diagnose the issue.
Pepper itself is overrated. At least the black one.
From Archwiki > xrandr:
Tip: Both GDM and SDDM have startup scripts that are executed when X is initiated. For GDM, these are in /etc/gdm/, while for SDDM this is done at /usr/share/sddm/scripts/Xsetup. This method requires root access and mucking around in system configuration files, but will take effect earlier in the startup process than using xprofile.
Cirrus for weather, Currencies for, well, currency conversion, LavSeeker for searching public toilets.
All are available on F-Droid.
Maybe you should consider a server & client architecture to use the right tool for the right job on each platform.
Try disabling hardware acceleration
But the aerosols would also amplify the green house effect right?
Mount the drive with the user or group as plex. See mount options uid and gid. You can also set precise permissions on the mount point (using options at mount time) to let plex access a subdirectory.
I think the command pattern would be useful. The user requests to perform a command. The command implementation can define preconditions and actions that mutate your game state.
You could start with a multiplayer server that handles the game logic, and a command line client that that can interact with it, create a game room and invite someone to it. You can handle realtime communication with socket.io. Once you have the client and some game rules, you can implement the client on a frontend using a canvas or game engine. You could then add the bot opponents using simple random number generation and some basic strategies.
If i understand correctly, whataboutism is used to burry a statement without any solid counter-argument. The accusation of it burries the whataboutism’s argument, which could be valid nonetheless.
But the article of the DMA says that the gatekeeper shall not prevent the business user to serve their product using other conditions than those of the gatekeeper’s platform. I think that would include Apple’s publishing guidelines.
I do not have a lot of experience with commerce but you’re supposed to optimize the customer experience. If the customer needs an account to add something to the cart, he might abandon his purchase during the account creation process.
Only some percentage of all potential users will abandon the purchase due to something like this, but your goal is to reduce this percentage as much as possible.
That’s why analytics are used to understand which environment leads to the most purchases and prevent users from abandoning the process.
Then it may be a token stealer.
If your account is linked to your Google, Apple or Facebook account that might be the culprit (I think you can see this in yout account settings). You need to check that because the consequences could be way worse than just having access to your Spotify account. You can use HaveIBeenPwned to look for leaks matching your e-mail address or password.
Another possibility is that your browser/OS or spotify client was infected by a token stealer which can automatically steal your access tokens as you log-in after changing the password.
You wouldn’t download a car‽