It only took what… 20 years?
It only took what… 20 years?
Running any binary that you can’t examine the source of (and confirm it was built from it without modification) is risky. It’s mostly a balance of trust and risk. Even developers have been known to insert what we could malware.
That said, if you get your cracked content from a trusted source, I’d say it’s generally safe. Otherwise, exercise extreme caution.
Is GMG an official reseller? Maybe I am out of the loop, but I thought they operated in the grey market.
I don’t see switch stuff in there. Did I miss it? Imagining it might have been removed to avoid the repo being destroyed.
I checked out the main feed, OP. Not sure this is going anywhere based on the content I saw. I have no opinion on the site as a technical work.
For what reason? Just curious. Don’t use them for anything critical.
Yup, thanks for the correction
I believe cocks.li is still open, so you could use them. You said in another reply that you’re not savvy enough for your own domain, but if you change your mind, purelymail.com With your own domain, you can easily switch providers without losing access to your addresses.
Have you tried ticking the lock metadata button when you are editing it?
I can vouch for PyQt, it works quite well for what it is. Be aware you might have to dig into the C++ docs if you’re trying to do something non-trivial.
If you like, you can use Qt Creator to build the GUI template, and then basically import into Python and build all the logic.
Last I checked you need to purchase an addon to have port forwarding with Windscribe.
These are good options in my experience that are P2P friendly and support port forwarding.
Air is the cheapest out of the bunch, they might still have a sale going on now.
That’s a good point, but I don’t figure this theoretical application would be big enough for any manufacturer to care about. I just wanted something for the people :-)
I think an open-source general device benchmark would be cool. Including CPU / GPU / Battery life metrics. As far as I know, everything that does this is proprietary.
Assuming the project uses them, yes. Might want to check with the project owner to be sure before jumping in.
I would start with the official documentation/guides. https://handlebarsjs.com/guide/#what-is-handlebars
It’s not overly complicated to learn if you already know some Javascript / HTML / CSS. If you don’t, then maybe look up some tutorials on FreeCodeCamp.
You can install the AniList and AniDB plugins and enable them on your library. From there, when you go to manually identify the series you can use one of the respective IDs to fetch metadata.
If it gets taken down, I will rehost elsewhere.
As mentioned in the post, from three sources. The two site dimps were publicly available as torrents. The third was distributed privately.
I mean yeah, Hexchat does work pretty well and is kind of finished. But it’s possible there are existing security vulnerabilities or new ones to be discovered in the future.
Just to let you know, Hexchat is no longer maintained, unless someone has forked it. Might be worth looking into alternatives.
Some interesting discussions there, looks like they won’t be hard up finding sponsors or places to move. Nice to see.