I don't see the number as that high. I'm at around 10 different people and considering I stopped around 2 months ago because I found one interesting enough that we decided to be mutually exclusive going forward.
I use dating apps or met a couple of them at the bouldering gym where I boulder.
>met a couple of them at the bouldering gym where I boulder.
That's why I stopped going to the local boulder gyms. Too many cookie-cutter "non-conformist dudes" who see the gym as their personal hunting grounds, creeping on the girls like a sleazy tennis instructor and bullying beginner guys because they don't like the competition.
Really cool idea to try to show the way to make a responsive smooth 60fps app. But the animations on my PC(firefox on linux) and phone (firefox on android) were really choppy.
Is the chrome experience much better?
EDIT: also the back button on my phone sent me back to the tile screen :(
Thanks for the response! Firefox definitely has some speed issues (FirefoxOS included), but I haven't diagnosed it yet. Chrome on Android is the current "best" experience.
Whether the events happened at GitHub or elsewhere doesn't matter for the story. She is describing her personal experience so that other people may be find the courage to ask for what they feel is equitable.
I've had dreams of doing this to an In-n-Out location. Every one I've been to has had all the employees doing every job like a scatterbrained beehive, and it takes 15-20 minutes to get your food.
I've been messing around with graphviz [1] and I thought I would make the parent comment into a graph [2]. You can see the code to generate the graph here [3].
> Thanks to our new servers, known bad keys[2] from Debian and Ubuntu are now blacklisted. We estimate that about 1000 keys in our database were impacted by this. If you get authentication errors using keys that worked a day ago, please double-check that they are not on our blacklist. If they are, you should ensure your software is updated and generate new keys. We’ve got a guide to help you out with this.
Woah, this new article says a lot of weak-Debian keys were found. Does this mean Github had a regression in their blacklisting since 2009? Or maybe they didn't blacklist enough originally?
Actually the facts are not incompatible here. There are two questions: Are weak Debian keys accepted in the web app? Are weak Debian keys accepted by their SSH.
The answers were yes and no. It's the same for most systems right now. You can put a weak Debian key in authorised keys, but you won't be able to login anyway.