What meaning does this even have if all the high severity vulnerabilities are from <2010 and in 1.x versions when it's 2023 now and we have Moodle 4.2?
A$200 per week for being on-call (5am-8:30am weekdays, 9am-5pm weekends and public holidays, three people in the rota). Actually having to do anything just goes into the normal overtime system.
For all the extra effort of having an on-call system it's used less than half a dozen times a year, but the boss likes being able to charge for it.
Problem is, there's a bad update combination for the RB1100 that can cause it to get into a reboot loop that has to be resolved in person with a direct connection and a recovery tool.
Yeah, ^ this is what convinced me to switch to it. It just produces reasonable, compliant markdown files, and displays them. Most markdown-folder apps handle its output just fine, it's just a better experience.
I like open source a lot, but for my data I much prefer interoperable. I've watched too many projects and companies die and take my stuff with them.
Why bother? The Venn diagram of people that need a bug-for-bug clone of RHEL and think that the proposed process is in any way appropriate is two seperate circles.
Two things spring to mind: My experience with a YouTube premium trial ended immediately upon being told that I couldn't play music in a second place at the same time. And ad-blocking is part of my security posture.
I have plenty of local storage. Moving forward, maybe good videos won't just go into a playlist with the assumption that YouTube will continue to be available.
uBlock Origin itself gave me oh what the fuck reaction but seems its gone now; text has been fixed already. No information on time of the edit was provided.
Perhaps they reverted article back because an hour ago I was checking French text (thus my comment) in a new private window and uBlock wasn't mentioned and now indeed, it's there