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It isn't! yes runs at 7.2 GiB/s on my macbook air. Though I have Linux installed on it instead of Mac OS :)


Are you trolling? The commenter obviously meant the macOS version of "yes".


Or search for the "Welcome to Paypal" email if you haven't deleted it. Turns out my account was created when I was 14.


Yeah, looks like my mail backlog for that account falls a few years short. I guess I didn't know about IMAP back then, or had weird ideas about data retention. :/


Time to close it.


https://apps.google.com/products/vault/

Thanks, for me it is: Don't use Google Apps for Education for anything except for taking advantage of it by uploading your encrypted data to the nice "unlimited" Google drive space or sending PGP mails.


Don't use Google Apps for Education for anything except for taking advantage of it by uploading your encrypted data to the nice "unlimited" Google drive space

Is this really abusable in this fashion?


I have a few terabytes of encrypted backups and disk images (via command line OpenSSL) on my "unlimited" Google Drive for Education account. I do not consider this an abuse, but a perfectly valid use case for Google Drive. If they don't like it, they can feel free to stop using the word "unlimited". However, I believe they do do some sort of throttling.


Love the way all the tests use "customer" and "product" nodes.


It smells very sanitised, the code comments are oddly uniform.

Still, tax payers money is used to write this stuff, good on them for open sourcing it.


Haha i wonder what the product is when you're a spy agency


Oppression and control and leverage


Bombs. It's bombs.


It certainly gives you a feel for how they do development internally. End of the readme mentions a new version coming soon, instead of say, iterating on this one. Also, the main contributor is stripped of any personally identifiable information.


> stripped of any personally identifiable information.

The hypocrisy is staggering.


Instead of teaching you how to analyze old poetry or memorize facts that never enter long-term memory, schools should make you aware of manipulative marketing/sales tactics and how to recognize advertisements.


With my students, I do both poetry and manipulative rhetoric (marketing, politics, etc.); they are less exclusive than you may think.


You are a rare gem, like my teacher who taught us to play the WFF-and-Proof nerd-game "Propaganda"


How is there significantly less particulate matter and therefore less are quality in Cologne and Dortmund, which are located in a very densely populated area with a lot of traffic, than in Vienna?

http://aqicn.org/map/europe/ tends to only shows areas where PM2.5 is even measured as polluted, so I guess this might be inaccurate due to a lack of sensors in some areas, falsely believing they are less polluted.

You can easily see this by just looking at the air quality reports in Vienna: http://aqicn.org/map/europe/#@g/48.183/16.4118/12z


Wouldn't even call it a programmer error. Someone probably just implemented a getContacts() function that gets called often in the background without saving the data in a local database or caching - and why would you do anything other than this for very marginal performance benefits, a rise in complexity, and possible data sync issues?

Another app might access your contacts rarely but store them on their server (Facebook!?). I definitely prefer the previous scenario.


I'm sitting at a desk, working on an app that uses the contacts book like you're describing.

Your reasoning is spot on.


Plus, I would imagine that the contacts list is going to be the most efficient way to store and retrieve that data. It's in a database, just like anyone else's is, right?


Not sure if I'm flattered by the fact that it said it wasn't sure whether I was human 10 times in a row :(


Maybe everyone would benefit from a centralized solution where open-source projects submit requests for designing something and designers can have a go at it. This way designers will be able to quickly browse and find the projects most appealing to them / suited to their skills, are able to build a portfolio, and will be able to avoid awkward conversations with uninterested developers. I guess having created parts of a real game or program is worth more than the thousandth redesign of a popular web page, and it actually benefits someone.


I'm guessing more "right" in the sense of being nationalist, racist, aggressive, and having the largest amount of neo-nazis.

Economically they are probably not as much right. They are rather opportunistically interventionist, corrupt, and just plain stupid.


They are populist and without concepts. However they attract lots of voters because the traditional parties are failing at governing. This topic however is way more complex than that and I think has very little to do with Austria in the second world war or afterwards.

> and having the largest amount of neo-nazis

Most likely, but I doubt we have more neo nazis in general than other countries. But I would love to see statistics on that. We're one of the few countries that have strong punishments on this sort of stuff.


I meant neo-nazis / party

> Most likely, but I doubt we have more neo nazis in general than other countries.

Yes, probably not. I'm just guessing, but it looks like the former DDR has the most issues. Then there's also Greece.


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