Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | mschout's commentslogin

I used to fly SWA quite a bit, but the past few years they are often more expensive than American for the same routes out of my area (DFW), or, require connections when I could get a direct flight on American for the same price or less. Unless I'm flying with a lot of bags, its generally cheaper lately on another airline. I did love SWA's open seating and hope this change doesn't stick, but they no longer seem to have the cost advantage over the other carriers going for them. I fear if this change goes through, its only a matter of time before they start charging for checked bags and then they will be no different from any other airline.


If I'm accessing IMAP with an app password will I still be able to do this after the Sep 30 deadline? I've re-read this 3 times and I have no idea. It almost sounds like they are disabling anything other that XOAUTH auth method from IMAP (which, I think, they already did for non Workspace accounts).


Have you heard about our Lord and Savior pipewire?


Unless you live in Dallas/Fort Worth where American has a strangle hold on the flights out of here. You basically have very few other options.


I also am confused somewhat here. With KMS, if you need to encrypt larger payloads, KMS itself is of no help except to generate a data key to use and you are left to either use AwsCrypto, or roll your own encryption using the data key which itself is encrypted by AWS KMS. If you happen to be using a language that does not have a port of the AwsCrypto library I am unclear if say AES CBC is okay or not.

If you are able to use AwsCrypto with KMS, I am assuming that is the recommended pathway as that is the default that AWS provides and I am hoping that AWS has thought it through enough to have a sensible default.


I was gonna say cherry-pick is farily frequent for me. Also I seem to learn new variations once in a blue moon for common commands. E.g. recently I learned about the --cherry option for git-log and it changed my life.


I'm not sure I get it either. Maybe just simplicity / path of least resistance in that NiceHash provides a quick way to get up and running potentially without needing to install mining software and decide on a pool to participate in etc?


Yes, AWS MFA is very poorly implemented.


LOL. I assume you're trolling. The official ZFS implementation has been Illumos for years now.


There is no trolling whatsoever. ZFS was originally made by Sun and Sun was acquired by Oracle almost 10 years. ZFS is owned by Oracle and is a legal minefield.



Exactly!

Most registrars are already redacting whois output to comply with GDPR.

Registrars that aren't doing this for non-EU costomers (e.g.: godaddy) are the exception. The only reason for this is to push sales of their privacy/proxy registration service.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: