Astronomers usually aren't tracking satellites, so if one shows up in an image it's only as a streak. You need to be moving the camera to track the object to get a reasonably clear image (or very short exposure times, which are relatively uncommon in astronomy).
Uber is worldwide - I’ve used it on 4 continents. I actually signed up for it when in South Africa.
Considering they sold their business to Grab, I think you could safely say Uber+Grab are as close to a global service as you can get, and probably represents a significant fraction (though maybe not 50%+) of the global market
I've been thinking a lot about this one, and it gets a ton of help in the fact that Bill Hader is actually good at facial impressions, and that's what really sells it.
It's not my project; I'm just a collaborator. My experience has been that a very tiny minority of Python code out there is written in this style, so unless you're only starting projects from scratch, you can't benefit from it.
And that'd be fine if everyone were on board with it and that were the general direction of the project, but I don't think that's true.
I've never seen a strict, type-annotated Python project out there in the wild, and I've seen a decent amount of them. A random non-primary-contributor isn't going to have much luck stepping into an established project and getting everyone to go along with adding annotations to the whole thing.
And if I were starting a project from scratch, rather than coercing the language to do something it wasn't really designed for, I'd just use a language that has first-class support for types directly in the compiler, like Java or Go.
For my fiancée, she deleted her facebook a long time ago, and she never paid attention to the username. We just made a best attempt at guessing the “user name”
Other techniques include tunneling over DNS, tunneling over ICMP, finding flaws in the HTTP parser, scanning the default router for open ports, scanning intermediate proxies for open ports, exploiting bad proxy redirect rules, finding protocols and ports that the firewall doesn't block outbound, and finding holes in the paywall's web apps.
Once upon a time there was a pre-paid mobile internet provider that sold USB sticks. It turned out that once you had initially activated the stick, even without an account, it would always default to a paywall until you had an account paid up. The HTTP parser of the paywall proxy was so bad, it only filtered connections with CRLF as the line-terminator for HTTP requests... so a simple proxy that converted CRLF to LF bypassed the paywall.
I'd like to see an MFA-version of Kerberos/kinit, and a PAM module that checks for ticket revocation on login.
That's not so different from BeyondCorp and Uber's model.
Alternatively, some kind of OpenID Connect init (oidcinit) to get a JWT and then a PAM module like the kerberos one (which also checks the JWT's Key Id for revocation on authentication)
From what I've read about BeyondCorp it's far more sophisticated than just Teleport. It's also a service monitoring status of a device including boot security throughout the entire life of the decide, private keys stored in TPM, plus various tiers that depend on multiple factors.
I think we have just the (Open Source) solution for you: https://bit.ly/Keymasterhttps://github.com/Symantec/keymaster
This issues MFA-ed ephemeral credentials: SSH certs, Kerberos compatible X509 certs, X509 certs for Kubernetes and well as being an OpenID-Connect/OAuth2 IDentity Manager.
users with totp tokens can kinit using their password+totp in the password field. better still, if you use PAM for all your services, you you can define hbac rules allowing users access to specific services on specific hosts.
the caveat is that the freeipa servers must be available to provide authorization even once the ticket is issued. with x509, the authenticating host doesn't need to rely on a server for anything but CRL checks
If you are just running a web app, then this is the correct answer. If your business is in your database, you employ data analysts and want to gleam some additional insights from your database, then it might be worth a look, though most people who chose MySQL did so because they were building a web applications and don't employ analysts.
Joe Rogan, while not the best interviewer, is getting better. When he prepares, he can ask good questions and gets the guest to come out of their shell. He's one of the only places to go for good long form interviews.
His interview with Russel Brand is hilarious and deeply insightful, which was really surprising. I don't listen that often but will put it on when someone like that is on. Bound to be some entertaining banter.
Rogan’s interviews are largely a thinly-veiled excuse to push right-wing BS to the impressionable young men that comprise his audience.
As someone who’s had to talk people out of racist and misogynistic ideology that they were pipelined into through Rogan/his guests, I really wish he didn’t have so much purchase. I know he has a very polished “chill” veneer, but his long-time friendship with Alex Jones should clue people in to what he’s actually after. He even appeared on Jones’ show a week after one of the Sandy Hook parents who had been targeted by Jones’ listeners killed himself.
Rogan is not "right-wing," and people saying that have not listened to his views thoroughly. He is open-minded (sometimes to a flawed degree), and had Jones on and it was the funniest thing I've heard. Jones is a lunatic, and Rogan exposed that. The pseudo-architectural anthropologist was also pretty funny.
I’ve listened to many hours of his show, his interviews with far right types like Gavin McInnes and Stephen Molyneux. I had to in order to talk a friend down from some really dark thinking he was encouraged toward through Rogan’s show. But I’m sure that when I heard him denigrating Muslims or talking about how trans women are actually just confused gay men, I just needed to listen more “thoroughly.”
I grew up in the rural Midwest in a working class family, so spare me your appeals to the “reality of America.” Not all of us are as hateful as the right-wing grifters whose images Rogan helps launder.
As a 25+ year NPR junkie, I can say Gross brought on the trend of hosts thanking their guests "so much" for being there. This started somewhere around 2011.
I used to believe Gross was the best interviewer until I heard some Stern interviews from 2014. While Stern talks a lot more, he is able to elicit more genuine responses from the guests and his interviews are real-time, not edited. Fresh Air suffers from having to break every 10 minutes.
I believe the parent was referring to Gross's recent two part interview with Stern. It's actually reveletory to hear them discuss interview technique (for example, interviewees are physically present with Stern and are not with Gross) although it's not a major part of the interview.
One observation: Stern was not always as effective an interviewer as he has been in recent years.