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Thanks for the explanation! I didn’t realize it was mostly a maintenance limitation, I thought maybe 32-bit instructions could be an extra attack vector on a physical CPU instruction level or something like that.
Isn’t supporting 32-bit apps on a 64-bit OS a security concern though? I thought that’s why some linux distros were disabling 32-bit repositories by default on their 64-bit versions
I feel like squash and merge on GitHub/GitLab is nicer for that anyway though, it makes the main branch so much cleaner automatically
You’ll have to settle for naming your child after one of their public keys, but then your child will only be able to talk to them.
Oh true I didn’t realize the semicolons were missing (that’s what the compiler errors are for)
Could also be rust (no parens on ifs there either), kind of hard to tell with just an if statement and some function calls
Hi, it’s me, the intern refactoring the spaghetti .NET core backend. I’m not in a basement though. AMA
Zangoose@lemmy.onetoReddit@lemmy.ml•Just deleted my reddit account, along with all my posts and comments.31·2 years agoIn my experience with google at least, you have to specifically add “lemmy” to get any results to show up (and a lot of them aren’t related to the search term, just general lemmy pages), which doesn’t solve the problem until enough people know to add it.
I’m all for lemmy overtaking reddit but let’s not waste people’s time by deleting useful information 🙃. Deleting comments with solutions to problems will just come off as obnoxious and make people want to avoid lemmy.
Zangoose@lemmy.onetoReddit@lemmy.ml•Just deleted my reddit account, along with all my posts and comments.61·2 years agoThey won’t come here… They’ll go wherever they can to solve the problem, which won’t be here because Lemmy doesn’t really show up in search results yet
Zangoose@lemmy.onetoReddit@lemmy.ml•Does anyone regret deleting their Reddit account?English3·2 years agoCheck the community this is on
I love not having downvotes federated 😎