That's a shame, because bing was become pretty decent as a search engine lately
I had to talk to some company's chatbot yesterday that was just if/else powered. That sure was cumbersome to do. It couldn't even tell me the company's mailing address.
You shouldn't take that personally. Just be glad we don't judge on looks here.
It's like we live in some kind of capitalist hellscape...
There's plenty of those around already... well... maybe not exactly for kids perse... but I'm sure most dnd stories are kid friendly enough. A couple of ogres decapitations never hurt anyone.
No, this is an internet forum. You can tell it's not a home by the lack of walls, roof and physical presence.
It's possibly the fithieth time I've read this, but it still brings a tear to my eye.
What differentiates an annoyance from something that is mildly infuriating? Seems like they're pretty much the same to me.
Anyways, if this community doesn't get any content, than i guess "mildly infuriating" means "nothingness". We define the meaning of the concept by what we post here and what we upvote here.
Those aren't emojis, these are emojis (-; :p o-: 0==8 <3. In my time, we still had respect for our elders.
Now get off my lawn!!!
I recieved this email today. I don't use twitch, only made an account once for some specific purpose. I don't know these people and I'm a 100% certain they don't know me. This is just toxic marketing to lure me back in.
Amateurs! We, Europeans, have seen you two shoot yourself in the foot and now we're rushing to shoot ourselves in the foot too.
Yes, they all boink the shell until it's boinked enough for one of them to break through. Than that one thanks his mates by shutting and locking the door and leaving them out there to die.
This is going to be europe at the next european elections, when everything turns out to have become shittier than it was. "Europeans now regret their populist revolt"
I didn't even know it was an ietf standard. Let aline there were versions. Apparently it's only since may this year that there are 8 versions. Before it were only 5.
Ja, ik wil... stemmen! Mélanie en Bram stappen vandaag in het huwelijksbootje, maar gingen vanochtend eerst even stemmen in Oostdijk.
[Update: It seems to have been fixed now]
I teach a course in java and springboot for beginners. I would like to walk my students through the code of a real world java or springboot application. Can anyone recommend a good example?
In this letter, Dijkstra talks about readability and maintainability in a time where those topics were rarely talked about (1968). This letter was one of the main causes why modern programmers don't have to trouble themselves with goto statements. Older languages like Java and C# still have a (discouraged) goto statement, because they (mindlessly) copied it from C, which (mindlessly) copied it from Assembly, but more modern languages like Swift and Kotlin don't even have a goto statement anymore.
It could be weeks or even months before crew members can leave, due to complications beyond their control. Here’s why they’re still stuck – and how they’re coping.
Update: the ship has been towed now
https://lemm.ee/post/29785400
> So I'm making a project in SpringBoot with Oauth security. > > If I use Auth0 as my Authorization Server, I can register an application there and just say that I want user to be able to login with Google an Facebook. That's all it takes. > > If I use Keycloak as my Authorization Server, I can also have users choose Google or Facebook as there prefered login, but in order to provide that, I have to register my app with Google and Facebook first. > > So how come it's so easy with Auth0 and a little less easy with Keycloak? Is it a contract thing, does Auth0 have contracts with all these providers or something?
So I'm making a project in SpringBoot with Oauth security.
If I use Auth0 as my Authorization Server, I can register an application there and just say that I want user to be able to login with Google an Facebook. That's all it takes.
If I use Keycloak as my Authorization Server, I can also have users choose Google or Facebook as there prefered login, but in order to provide that, I have to register my app with Google and Facebook first.
So how come it's so easy with Auth0 and a little less easy with Keycloak? Is it a contract thing, does Auth0 have contracts with all these providers or something?
It’s something simple but makes the code much cleaner
I came across this post (and more like it) claiming extensions to be a good, or at least different, solution for mapping DTO's.
Are they though? Aren't DTO's supposed to be pure data objects? I've always been taught to seperate my mappings in special mapping services or mapping libraries like MapStruct and ModelMapper for implementing the good practice of "seperation of concerns".
So what about extensions?
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
I get postman exports from students which I use to check their work. The authorisation of those requests now often contain hardcoded jwt tokens that are invalid by the time I get to checking them and I have to change every individual request with a global variable.
I do instruct my students to use variables, but there's always a couple who just don't, but that's a whole different issue.
Right now I'm using a regex find and replace to remove the Request authorization header in the json export file (which than defaults to 'inherit from parent'). This sort of works, but isn't ideal.
Do any of you know if postman offers an easier solution for this?
The world has always been going the shit and will continue to go to shit until the end of time. It takes mountains to influence the tides of nations. You should take the responsibilities you can bear, but no more.
The added image is a screenshot of how I see gifs in connect. There's supposed to be buttons in the bottom right corner, I've been told. But I can't see them. Do I need to add them in some setting somewhere?
I know how to implement basic oauth. My problem is that if I make a simple security filter like:
` @Bean
public SecurityFilterChain configure(HttpSecurity http) throws Exception { http .authorizeHttpRequests(authorize -> authorize .anyRequest().authenticated() ) .oauth2Login(withDefaults()); return http.build(); }`
Than I can adress @GetMappings in my browser and get prompted a oauth login screen and login there, but I can't adress a PostMapping or GetMapping in postman, because it doesn't redirect to a login screen (you get the html for the login screen as the ResponseBody in postman)
I can get a valid acces token from auth0 via 'https://{yourDomain}/oauth/token', but if I simply pass that jwt along as a "Bearer token" in postman, it doesn't work. It still shows me the login-screen-html in the response body.
It seems to me there's two things I can do:
- Make sure postman bypasses the login screen. I maybe don't really want to do that, since I want my backend and frontend to communicate their security through jwt. Or else I have to convince other people (from a different department) to change the way they implement frontend security, which is a pain for everyone. (If it needs to happen, it needs to happen though)
- Make sure the backend parses the jwt somehow. Maybe an extra Filter that checks the jwt's validity with the provider? I'm not sure how to tackle this.