y6jjp
is generally faster, tho, as long as you know you need exactly 7 lines or happen to have :set nu rnu
in your config. Also, if using nvim, having yanks highlighted helps immensely
I mean, I see a usecase for that, given you make a separate community for that, and not, say, spam c/technology with everything posted on XDA. So, kinda like RSS with comments. I personally follow hackaday both here and via RSS.
Alternatively, one can mirror someone who publishes rarely and only cool stuff. I remember mr.d0x being such a guy (now I don’t really follow security-related things much, so mb it’s changed, but I doubt it)
So, the “[edit: last] previous update” was built from ac41318
, since then there were exactly 2 commits:
Both do not immediately look malicious. So, either the release is poisoned (in which case you can build it from source and see if still detected), or the repo was poisoned before, and the payload didn’t activate until those changes, or AVs decided to crackdown on random shit running their code in other law-abiding processes’ address space 🤣
Idk, being born in the early 2000s didn’t make torrenting any harder. Dare I say, it was the opposite: in the 10s, when I got into all this this, there already was a bunch of well-established trackers with tons of content one could use without fear of downloading a piece of malware instead of a new shiny game, for example.
Regarding the title: as in just make?
Are those still in use? With how cheap modern MCUs got, it kinda seems like it often makes more sense to get smth a bit more powerful and get the benefits of overall easier and faster development. May be wrong here, tho – it’s not like I compared numbers or something
Addit: I mean, 8 bit may easily still be a bit cheaper, yet corps will likely spend more than the difference in price paying devs
Or build yourself a crkbd, yeah. That’s beside the point.