Perhaps snyk.io I used it in the past, but I didn't find it quite useful. Now I have a github action to upgrade dependencies every week. But you want some kind of scanner to be more involved on the actual codebase. Did you look into https://github.com/marketplace?query=security ? That's what I would do. But I never heard of any of those listed there. Let us know your findings after some time if you test 'em ;) good luck!
It's been always the same. Backend, server logic, database... dynamic content; on one hand. JavaScript runs on the browser for almost anything, sometimes for dynamic content. But it's not tied. You could have an in-browser button with a counter for the numbers of times it was pressed (that's actually an entry-level programmer exercise) and that's a static site. If you saved the counter value to the server (e.g. database) then it's not static anymore.
This! And, baby-steps: don't go about installing every app you see. Try backup strategies, put them to test (bring service down and up again with data from backup). Play, have fun.
He asks whatever model is running behind either system to do the comparison and pastes the text. It's full of errors, like perplexica saying farfalle doesn't use LLM. Meanwhile, I just checked and it supports anything from ollama to groq (gpt4o, sonnet, etc.)
That's also more on to who the user is (how they interact with the device.) IMHO it's valuable to at least get to search the internet with an error message. I switched over a decade ago, but on Windows all I had was hexadecimal codes or vague messages. I was a power user, fiddling with all sorts of software, and things did break on either side. I stayed where I could learn, a steep curve, sure. But not a wall.
It's one of the most common biases for historians: anachronicity, it's about looking to people in the past with the goggles from the present (current biases, and/ or values). Furthemore, priests copying books by hand was extremely common before the invention of the printing press.
I wonder if this case is special for its time (the first copyist?) or book (was it protected by any hierarchy?).. Other than that, I agree and fail to see a salient connection to "our" piracy.
I'd rather keep the origins on musical pieces, probably classical music. Which is difficult to get even to this days (too niche, some popular pieces have scanned PDFs tho)
I am very much looking for feedback on this self-proclaimed simple oidc. Authentik is not as bad as Keycloak, but from what I reckon theres still room for improvement! -fingers crossed-
Oh, and just to be clear. The whole idea of separating the two fields is plain wrong. There's a lot of workers that do both. And, if there's any worker that only does 1 discipline, it's likely working in a team with at least 1 person doing the other...
This only shows how ignorant on bioinformatic analyses is whoever listed two items on the left. Without effort, I can say... git, bash, python, R-lang, alignment algorithms, UMAP, clustering algorithms, snakemake, nextflow, slurm, amazon web services, google cloud platform, conda, heuristics, more algorithms, deep learning, machine learning, imputing missing values, frequentist statistics, parametric or not, bayesian statistics, mmm.. Ok, point given.
Oh, fair point. Perhaps rclone.org then! :O