It happened to me too, and I was unable to verify myself by any
acceptable means due to being based in a country other than that of my
passport. Having been redirected somewhere else for the identity
verification onboarding, I think the process is outsourced by
Hetzner to a firm of security specialists apparently oblivious to
edge cases. Nice work if you can get it.
There's some other specific character besides spaces that's also not
permitted in passwords. It's a normal printable ascii character but I
can't remember what it is any more, and sometimes it's not caught.
Let's hope nobody signs up with it by mistake.
I have, and the technical support representative at Proton confirmed
it, but not without implying that it was my fault for using rclone. I
asked the official recommendation for Linux users to do automated or
scriptable backups onto a Proton drive and the answer was that some
kind of SDK was planned for the future. Proton drive stopped working
completely with rclone shortly after that, which was about two months
ago.
To be honest, all consumer cloud storage providers get touchy when you access them via API.
Dropbox API refuses to sync certain 'sensitive' files like game backups (ROMs or ISOs). There is no way for Dropbox to know if you own the game and thus can own a backup, they just play file police.
I know everyone says SK combinators can express any computable
function, but I don't get it. How do we write this function foo in
terms of SK combinators alone? Is there some obvious programming trick
I'm missing that makes it trivial? (It wouldn't be the first time.)
Former backblaze customer here, the trick is that you can't copy and
paste your password as one might do with a password manager. You have
to type it manually so that the web page can interactively tell you
how strong the password is getting as you type it.
Backblaze lost me as a customer due to the new password and 2FA
requirements, which would lock me out if I were to lose my devices,
the exact scenario I'm trying to mitigate. Not affiliated, I'm now
trying my luck with pixeldrain, mega, and koofr (having quit proton
lately as well since it broke rclone compatibility a few weeks ago).
If a computer could have an intelligent conversation, then a person
could manually execute the same program to the same effect, and
since that person could do so without understanding the
conversation, computers aren't sentient.
Analogously, some day I might be on life support. The life support
machines won't understand what I'm saying. Therefore I won't mean
it.
I think it gets to the heart of the matter quite succinctly, but the more I see discussions on this the more I think that there's two viewpoints on this which just don't seem to overlap. (as in, I feel like people feel like the Chinese room is either obviously true or obviously false and there's not really an argument or elaboration on it that will change their minds).
I have self-published a couple of books. I do enjoy writing, but what I enjoy even more is being read. If I honestly felt my books were never going to be seen by anyone, I wouldn't have written them. Providing value to other people was the main source of meaning and joy for me with those projects.
I started using Jellyfin recently when the machine with my very old
never-to-be-updated pre-en**ified Plex died. I ran Jellyfin in trials
natively on Debian and Arch for about a year in anticipation of the
switch, and with Docker on Manjaro. It seemed to be going strong on
Debian but lost the plot on Arch over the course of several system
updates. Currently I'm sticking to Docker on Manjaro. I'm using the
same Intel N150 box for the Jellyfin server and playback without any
performance problems. The video library is NFS mounted over wifi
from a separate home file server.
For a second I thought this was an invocation of one of those informal "laws" (like a Murphys Law or Sturgeons Law), describing the feeling of finding one great thing and lamenting that there's no more like it.
So the hope of it being your discovery of a rich genre turns into the lament that it's one of one (how I feel about the Three Body Problem). But no, it's a real book. And looks like a great suggestion from what I can tell on wiki.
The judy array library is amazing for hardcore high performance with
large memory resident data structures in C, and now there's no more
patent on it. Somebody on here took issue when I asked about it once.
Disclaimer: no, you don't need judy arrays and no they aren't better
than your favorite thing.
There's some other specific character besides spaces that's also not permitted in passwords. It's a normal printable ascii character but I can't remember what it is any more, and sometimes it's not caught. Let's hope nobody signs up with it by mistake.
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