Yeah, I hadn’t heard of it, but it looks really cool. Gonna have to try that out.
Yeah, I hadn’t heard of it, but it looks really cool. Gonna have to try that out.
I use osmand on Android. Bit of a leaning curve to start as you need to download the maps you want and set up features, but then it is available offline as well and can include topographical and trails or other data if you’re not just traveling in cities.
Thanks, I understand the problem with using memory after it’s been freed and possibly access it changed by another part of the process. I guess I was confused by the double free explanation I read, which didn’t really say how it could be exploited, but I think you are right it still needs to be accessed later by the original program, which would not happen in Rust.
Thank you, that is very clear.
The way I understand it, it is a bug in C implementation of free() that causes it to do something weird when you call it twice on the same memory. Maybe In Rust you can never call free twice, so you would never come across this bug. But, also Rust probably doesn’t have the same bug.
My point is it seems it is a bug in the underlying implementation of free(), not to be caught by the compiler, and can’t Rust have such errors no matter its superior design?
All they need is a third developer to divide up the project for them and design the interfaces
They should have one for heterosexuality, too, if it’s all about tastes.
I like the DocuSign model. Just focus on securing your one account (email) and then make all the others use it as single factor.
I had the same thought. Like, I think Aurora is one of the most expensive ways to do this in AWS. But, since this particular set of data is so well-defined, and unlikely to change, roll your own is maybe not crazy. The transactions per second and size don’t seem that huge to me, so as things grow I imagine they can revisit this.
The client is not always right. Make them define “slow” in concrete comparison to the rest of the things that happen in their product and once you have a reasonable number, I think it’s likely you can beat it.
In addition, or maybe this is also what typing and structure means, organizing data to eliminate duplicated or derived info and determining the keys or indexes needed to access it and the rules governing access and update: that’s half your app specification right there and how well you do it makes a big difference to the speed and flexibility of implementing the other half.
I guess my point was who foots the bill for the expensive part and do they get an exclusive license on the patent?
How does the volunteered computer test for safety and efficacy?
Hello, ewroiugheqripougheqpiurghperiugheqrpiughqerpuigheq,
The fgets function will only read in as many characters as you tell it to (50) in the second parameter, so the rest of the input will simply be lost and the name will be truncated.
Used to be considered simply prudent to back up the vhs tapes you bought and people were encouraged to tape their favorite shows off the tv. Now some random CEO of the month has the right to bury decades worth of creative works?