Rexios 1d ago • 100%
If there was a Lemmy account setting to automatically bypass the proxy on failure then it might not require any front end work, but the manual bypass button would definitely need to be implemented in each client
Rexios 2d ago • 100%
Have you thought about solving this issue in the front end? The client I’m using (Mlem) implemented a feature to directly access the image if the proxy fails. This feature can either be triggered automatically or by pressing a button on the failed image. This allows users the benefit of the proxy while also having the option to give up their IP if they want to see a broken image.
Rexios 5d ago • 100%
You need physical access to one of your devices to approve web access. If someone had that they could also just turn on the toggle.
Rexios 5d ago • 100%
Are you saying enabling the setting to allow web access is downgrading your security? I think the security risk is super minimal. You need physical access to one of your devices to approve access every time.
Rexios 5d ago • 100%
Do you? I thought you just had to authorize from an Apple device every time.
Rexios 4w ago • 100%
It really doesn’t. I’ve seen bolts that have been at chargers for over 2 hours and still aren’t at 100%
Rexios 4w ago • 90%
The only thing wrong with this picture is a Bolt at a DCFC. They charge so ungodly slow they might as well be ICEing the stall they’re at.
Rexios 4w ago • 100%
What are you talking about? Even before this new “invisible cryptography” you set it up once per device and never have to think about it again.
Rexios 1mo ago • 100%
Clicking an external link exposes your IP address to the server. All someone has to do is send a link that looks like something you want but actually just logs your ip address and you’re doxxed.
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
The old feastables was actually good. The new stuff tastes like rebranded Hersheys.
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
It depends on how you’re streaming it, but if you use some service that streams a torrent directly and then throws it away afterwards you took the torrent data without contributing anything back to the swarm
Rexios 2mo ago • 90%
This kills the torrent
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
Somehow I got the exact same thing from mine
I just released [firebase_js_interop](https://pub.dev/packages/firebase_js_interop) which allows you to compose Firebase Cloud Functions in the Dart language. Along with my [firebase_rules](https://pub.dev/packages/firebase_rules) package it is now possible to create an entire Firebase project with only type-safe Dart code! There are a lot of components missing, but writing the interop code is tedious, not hard. With third-party contributions we should be able to get close to full interop quickly.
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
Wordle 1,161 3/6
⬛🟩⬛⬛⬛
🟨🟩🟨🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
I have that bot blocked. Those posts have little value here since no one seems to comment on them.
Rexios 2mo ago • 100%
If this requires admin rights to enable every week this is going to suck major ass for company MDM MacBooks
Rexios 3mo ago • 75%
Would you build a house out of a metaphorical term? It’s not literal. If a phone doesn’t boot it’s as useful as a brick until you fix it.
Rexios 3mo ago • 54%
What the fuck are you talking about. I was playing with custom roms 12 years ago and it was definitely a term people used. If anyone is ignorant here it’s you.
The pubstats.dev page keeps track of historical pub.dev data. I just made it so that it can also show the rank of a package on pub.dev based on its popularity score. For example [dio](https://beta.pubstats.dev/#/packages/dio) is rank 20 right now. If you haven't seen pubstats.dev before here are some other features: - Like count and popularity score tracked over time for all packages on pub.dev - Historical tracking of a lot of package metadata such as version and dependents - Compare like count and popularity graphs across multiple packages (ex https://beta.pubstats.dev/#/packages/dio,http) - If you sign in you can set up alerts for package info changes. Very useful for making sure you have maximum pub points! There are only Discord webhook alerts for now since that's what I use personally, but if you'd like to see more options feel free to contribute on GitHub. As an added bonus, https://beta.pubstats.dev uses the new WASM renderer. Thanks to the Flutter team for helping me make that possible! There is some weirdness with Google OAuth still with WASM (see [this issue](https://github.com/firebase/flutterfire/issues/12819)), but everything else works. If you want to set up Discord notifications you might want to use the stable https://pubstats.dev for now.
Since Hive v2 has been abandoned and v3/v4 are nowhere to be seen I decided to hard fork Hive into Hive Community Edition ([hive_ce](https://pub.dev/packages/hive_ce), [hive_ce_fluter](https://pub.dev/packages/hive_ce_flutter), [hive_ce_generator](https://pub.dev/packages/hive_ce_generator)). Originally hive_ce was just going to be in maintenance mode to keep up to date with the evolving Flutter/Dart ecosystem (mainly Flutter WASM support right now), but there are some things that bothered me too much to ignore. First of all... Hive v2 didn't support Sets. Why? I don't know but hive_ce does. Hive boxes natively support the Set type and the generator supports classes with Set fields. One of the main pain points with TypeAdapters was remembering to register them all. Well forget no longer because hive_ce_generator generates an extension method on Hive to register them all in one go: ```dart import 'package:your_package/hive_registrar.g.dart'; void main() { final path = Directory.current.path; Hive ..init(path) ..registerAdapters(); } ```
I posted about this package before and just got made fun of for the name, but this is a useful update for developers that work on large mono-repos on a daily basis. The `puby link` command used to require `pubspec.lock` files to be checked into version control in order to know which dependencies to grab, which most open source mono-repos do not allow. Notably, I work on the flutter/packages repo a lot and dealing with dependency resolution is a pain, but I just released an update to puby to fix this. This involves reusing the dependency resolution code directly from the pub command in order to catalog dependencies rather than relying on lock files. What this means in practice is you can have an empty pub cache, make a clean clone of the flutter/packages repo, and have all dependencies resolved in less than 30 seconds. The `puby link` command is now almost twice as fast as `melos bootstrap` and requires zero setup whereas melos likes to complain about your repository structure.
How is this legal? This has to be the most insecure login method I’ve ever seen. They removed the password from my account without consent and have no way to go back to requiring a password. Literally all an attacker has to do it gain control of either my phone/email and brute force a 4 digit pin. I’m going to have to change banks because of this. Oh also I posted this on the [bad version of Lemmy](https://www.reddit.com/r/OneFinance/s/UaCfEiQfJo) and the mod tried to claim that this method of auth is actually more secure than a password, posted a Wikipedia article about passkeys, and then locked the post… In no reality is it at all possible that this is more secure than a password. So _stay away_ from One Finance if you value your money
I’m using the iPad app in my Vision Pro and I can log in, but all the feeds just error out
Disclaimer: I made this I spend a lot of time contributing to huge mono repos ([flutter/packages](https://github.com/flutter/packages), [flutterfire](https://github.com/firebase/flutterfire), etc) and while some of them use [melos](https://pub.dev/packages/melos) to deal with the mess most of them don't. To help deal with this, I made `puby`. Melos can be useful, but it requires project-specific setup so it's not good for repos that you don't control (and don't already have it set up). `puby` requires no setup, and you can run it literally anywhere. For example, if you keep all your dart/flutter projects in one directory you can execute commands in all of them at once by running `puby` in the root directory. `puby` can do a lot, but here are the highlights: #### Run any pub command The first thing `puby` was made for is in its name: running pub commands. Run `puby get`, `puby upgrade`, etc to run those commands in all the projects in the current directory. Any extra arguments passed into `puby` will get passed to the commands `puby` runs. `puby` will automatically use the correct root command (dart/flutter) and even supports running with fvm if the project has it set up. `puby` combines the exit codes of the commands it runs, so it can be used to check for failures in CI. #### puby link `puby link` uses existing `pubspec.lock` files to catalog the dependencies required for all projects in the current directory, adds them to the pub cache, and then runs `pub get --offline` in all the projects in parallel. This can run up to _five times faster_ than a regular pub get. This requires you to check in your `pubspec.lock` files to git, but the benefit is that when you switch branches a `puby link` will get you up to date in a few seconds. #### puby clean `puby clean` used to just be an alias for `flutter clean`, but since I added support for running commands in parallel for `puby link` it can now clean all projects in parallel as well. This is useful to clear out the cache of an entire monorepo, but it also has a much cooler use: cleaning up all of your local dart/flutter projects at once. Run `puby clean` in the directory containing all your local projects and you'll be surprised how much disk space you can reclaim. #### puby exec Run any command in all projects #### Convenience commands puby comes with many conventience commands to make common tasks easier |command|equivalent| |---|---| |puby gen|[engine] pub run build_runner build --delete-conflicting-outputs| |puby test|[engine] test| |puby mup|[engine] pub upgrade --major-versions| |puby reset|puby clean && puby get| ## Outro My team and I use `puby` every day. Please let me know what you think!
https://geekhack.org/index.php?topic=96232.msg3172021#msg3172021 I have a couple of these from a while ago and enjoy them a lot. Very excited to see them come back!
Disclaimer: I made this I've been wanting a way to create type-safe Firebase rules for a while, so I made this package to let you do just that. I've used it for several of my projects now, and it's so much nicer than raw-dogging the rules syntax with no autocomplete. I was able to write rules from scratch without referencing the documentation once, and they deployed first try without any errors. I'm always hungry for feedback on my work, so please feel free to comment any feedback or suggestions.
Does anyone else think that auto regen is kind of useless? If I want the car to handle itself, I'll just use adaptive cruise. If I want control of the car, I'll just use IPEDAL. Auto just seems needlessly complex.