

I love the phrase “data is encrypted at rest.”
Having worked with a lot of medical data, the rules are simple:
- Encrypt at rest
- Rest is when the database is off
- Never turn off the database


I love the phrase “data is encrypted at rest.”
Having worked with a lot of medical data, the rules are simple:
Yea, I think many missed that.


While true, what actually happened was interesting. Algorithm’s are not inherently bad, afterall.
At some point, someone wrote a rule to verify DSO against other tech companies, and trigger an automated short position to correct the market changed from an earnings call.
To me, that’s pretty cool. This wasn’t magic LLM AI, this was a smart engineer that programmed a system to discover problems as they arose.
I used to be this way, now I just don’t care. If I’m interesting enough to watch, have fun.
Invalid diagram. FreeCAD demands representation.


Perhaps that’s backwards. Maybe women make batter CEOs, so AI parody of failure doesn’t apply as strictly.
This whole thread was great, but this, this got me.


There are plenty of alternative Internets. And even just skipping the HTTP protocol is a start. IRC is a great example.


It’s now over 9K. Nice job.


#4 is a good thing. ORMs do not make queries better or safer, they make them easier for devs that don’t learn SQL or safe calls. In some cases, they have been shown to cause slowdowns.
But left handed kids don’t exist, either.
I understand the language and meaning, I may just be in a whoosh.
Depending on the topics, Whirlpool is still pretty active: https://forums.whirlpool.net.au/
I’m confused, this post shows as just 20hrs old for me?
One thing I don’t like about NY, there isn’t a stay-right law. It’s actually a “use any open lane” law. Crazy.
Plus all the Stroads.
Ah yes, I guess if that was interpreted as sad ffmpeg team it would hold true 😀


I don’t know a single GenX who disagrees with the first statement. (I an on then Millennial edge, though, so could be bias)


I’ve always been a fan of
Not the brightest brick in the box.
Takeaway: Filevine sounds like a good company.