Is there a way of signing binaries to ensure that they are built from a specific source code? I do not want to trust the creator of the binary, I want to trust only available source code that can be audited.
Do I have "Seagulls! (Stop It Now)" in my "Your Top Songs 2018" playlist in Spotify? I do have "Seagulls! (Stop It Now)" in my "Your Top Songs 2018" playlist in Spotify. And I'm proud of it.
I just watched Bushes of love *again* (thank you, @inmysocks and @ekaitz_zarraga, I've been singing the line "she'd probably love to honky tonk" since yesterday) and I felt deeply connected to the first comment on the video:
> There is no such thing as "the last time" you'll come back to watch this...
I love to find frustrated coders complaining on the comments of popular codebases. From the source of scala.io.BufferedSource:
"Yes, this is ridiculous, but if I can't get rid of Source, and all the Iterator bits are designed into Source, and people create Sources in the repl, and the repl calls toString for the result line, and that calls hasNext to find out if they're empty, and that leads to chars being buffered, and no, I don't work here, they left a door unlocked."
No encontramos *nada*. Granada se está poniendo como Barcelona o Mallorca y en las inmobiliarias nos dicen que están sin pisos para larga duración, que son todo pisos turísticos :(
I never know what I'm talking about, nor whether what I say is trueProgramming · Mathematics · Anti-capitalism · Libre Softwarees/en/(sw soon) · he/him