It’s not about the money. It’s about sending a message.
Best I can do is M. Night Shyamalan on Peacock
I remember this actually: Ted Cruz kisses his daughter… it doesn’t go well
Aliens would extract our bile and earwax.
I have just dumped code into a Chrome console and saved a cert while in a pinch. It’s not best practices of course, but when you need something fast for one-time use, it’s nice to have something immediately available.
You could make your own webpage that works in the browser (no backend) and make a cert. I haven’t published anything publicly because you really shouldn’t dump private keys in unknown websites, but nothing is stopping you from making your own.
That’s what NodeJS and Deno are.
The point of the browser support means it runs on modern Web technologies and doesn’t need external binaries (eg: OpenSSL). It can literally run on any JS, even a browser.
Just going to mention my zero-dependency ACME (Let’s Encrypt) library: https://github.com/clshortfuse/acmejs
It runs on Chrome, Safari, FireFox, Deno, and NodeJS.
I use it to spin up my wildcard and HTTP certificates. I’ve personally automated it by having the certificate upload to S3 buckets and AWS Certificates. I wrote a helper for Name.com for DNS validation. For HTTP validation, I use HTTP PUT.
Pippi Longstocking
I mean, you can find 70s punk images just like this. I’m sure some are already great-grand parents. Nancy and Sid are from 1977:
Don’t use JSON for the response unless you include the response header to specify it’s application/json
. You’re better off with regular plaintext unless the request header Accept asked for JSON and you respond with the right header.
That also means you can send a response based on what the request asked for.
403 Forbidden (not Unauthorized) is usually enough most of the time. Most of those errors are not meant for consumption by an application because it’s rare for 4xx codes to have a contract. They tend to go to a log and output for human readers later, so I’d lean on text as default.
While
Whyle
Whyull
Yull
Yul
Women are so cute and the best chance I can get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids to be able to get the kids
Even line-height
in CSS3 is draft. Saying no drafts should be implemented is a ridiculous standpoint: a standpoint not even Firefox aligns with:
Standardization requirements for shipping features
What evidence is necessary will vary, but generally this will be:
W3C - the specification is at the Candidate Recommendation maturity level or more advanced; shipping from a Working Draft or a less advanced specification requires evidence of agreement within the working group that shipping is acceptable
https://wiki.mozilla.org/ExposureGuidelines
But keep moving those goal posts.
What? They all have W3C specs. Firefox just chose not to implement them.
You think you’re trashing Chrome, but you’re trashing Firefox instead.
Firefox, unfortunately, has been lagging behind. Safari is close to surpassing Firefox if they haven’t already. Safari really made a big shift for actually implementing web standards around 16.4.
Chrome is still the absolute best for accessibility. Neither Firefox nor Safari properly parse the aria labels when it comes to how things are rendered. Chrome will actually render text in accessibility nodes as presented on screen (ie: with spacing). Safari and Firefox only use .textContent which can have words beingmergedwhentheyshouldn’t.
Chrome also has Barcode and NFC scanning built right in. I’ve had to use fake keyboard emulators for iOS. Though, Chrome on Mac OS X also supports it. Safari has native support for Barcode behind a flag, so it’ll likely come in the future. Barcode scanning is still possible with Firefox through direct reading of the camera bitmap, which is slower but still good. There’s no solution for NFC for Safari, but if Chrome ever comes iOS, that would possibly be solved. I believe Face Detection is similar, but I’ve never used it.
I understand the full lyrics, but most songs generally default to romanticism. If you’re not paying attention it’s easy to misinterpret.