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Only because Microsoft offers “certified professional” badges and the MSCP’s are pushing the only thing they are certified for, and the corporations buy into the whole “certified” thing.

I have a ton of customers where the admins are constantly reminding everyone about the certifications they have, all while their basic security is below average.

… but they are certified!


I love it!

Q: how do I change my name in the app?


You can do this in the web app: https://app.issen.com/manage-account


Came here to point out the PBKDF use in each frame but found this fantastic write up


Very interesting, we've started on an approach to enable LLM agents communicate and context share in their own language, but I think calling it compression is actually more intuitive. I love this


Fingers crossed, a well promoted campaign in EU may force apples hand… again..


I honestly don’t see that as a problem…

A human learns by looking at all public code

A robot learns by looking at all public code

(Okay, I have some reservations to above comment, but for discussions sake, that’s what I’m going with)


Ffs America! What kind of home owner association rejects are running this country?


I'm not trying to be that guy, but NuGet.org is littered with bad packages, and it's hard to see, at a glance, what packages are commercial, trials, or open source. Some packages are not even .NET packages.

The default search scoring could also benefit from some work as old, unmaintained, packages often show up on the first page.

I wish there was a way to filter by license, open-source, and/or source-code-package.

I've been a .net guy ever since C# was called COOL and I even went to Redmond back in the days as part of the early adopter program. I'm worried about the adoption and I think it's mainly because of the perceived low quality when it comes to browsing NuGet.org

Compared to npmjs.org, NuGet.org could be soooo much better.


> NuGet.org is littered with bad packages, and it's hard to see, at a glance, what packages are commercial, trials, or open source

True, but on the other hand, there are some areas where NuGet is better than npm. For example:

- Backwards compatibility is more common in the .NET world.

- .NET libraries tend to reinvent small wheels rather than adding a new dependency. I feel like npm has gone too far with the "don't reinvent the wheel" concept.


The site claims end-to-end encryption, but the API doesn't reflect that.


I live in Chicago, and I sold my tesla and my lamborghini and replaced them with subway, a boosted board and a divvy membership. I’ve never been happier. For road trips I still pull out the lil porsche, but that rarely happens any more.

With home delivery of pretty much everything I need, I rely on Wholefoods and Peapod for what I used to have my car for. 5 Years ago that wasn’t an option.


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