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Seriously, turn on the news once in a while.


I am watching the news. The ICC is investigating potential war crimes made by Russia at the moment but no substantial proof yet. War is terrible, but there are international definitions of war crimes.


That’s what I am betting on - but it isn’t 1.0 yet, and that matters too.


This is great! https://github.com/undergroundwires/privacy.sexy/tree/master... looks like the raw data (yaml) for all these commands, including commands for macOS. With that, it’s at least plausible to audit these commands.

I probably still won’t trust it on a critical system without a reputable audit though, I think I’d still prefer to either trust Microsoft or Apple or go run OpenBSD or Linux instead.


Yes! I try to always phrase it as "the part I can see from here will take at least X time".


Then you can definitely name one.


The funniest one I’ve heard so far is Joe Frazier. The birthday apparently matches, but this may have to wait to be confirmed in court: https://www.bigtrial.net/2020/11/smokin-joe-frazier-among-22...


Never heard of this source - I hope it’s okay in this time of misinformation to ask for a recognizable source?

Edit: I mean I am okay with leaving it as “somebody on the internet says”, but wondered if the evidence was more clear than that.


Not much else for that one online, Giuliani cited it and it’s funny. The other one he cited was a woman who registered to vote the day after she died:

https://www.swgfuneralhome.com/obituary/Denise-Ondick

https://twitter.com/clewandowski_/status/1325256319176224770...

The tweet has a screenshot, and unless they’ve already corrected it, you can probably find it on the PA website yourself.


Okay, so your source is Giuliani. Well that is an answer, I guess. Sorry I was looking for a news source and not a political one. This is not nearly as credible - until evidence reaches a courtroom - as “somebody on the internet”.


I am less certain that Fox didn't know who @whyspertech was.


I've been actively wondering about generating some efficient and portable C code, and for this project it wouldn't be super-complicated, but undefined behavior is the one thing that keeps me away. C++ and Rust and C# and many other languages all add wonderful things, with side effects on portability, clarity, learning curve, language stability, etc. - wonderful things that I don't always want in a twenty-year-stable system.

Anyway, thank you for these, I'm definitely going to look further here.


I think they just missed the memo that Windows now has a modern Chromium-based Edge option for a web view component. I mean, before that, the situation was really pretty bad, but now I'd expect it to be fine. (Have not tested it yet.)


Actually this is not just a Windows issue, it's also something that impacts Mac OS. There have been instances where the native webview on MacOS had bugs that were not resolved until the next major release of OSX. (Can't seem to find a link, will add one later).

In addition, while Windows may now have an up to date version of Edge based on Chromium, which it now uses to render it's webviews, do you know that these Edge installations are not auto updated like Chrome/Firefox for Enterprise installations?

That means they will quickly fall behind from the current latest Chromium, and will throw bugs at some point in the future, when you rely on newer Chromium features. In addition, you will also get bug reports about your app being broken on some windows installations but not others and you will spend way too much time trying to figure out the issue, only to come to the conclusion that you can't really do anything other than change your code back to the older feature-set.

In addition, using Electron and bundling the Chromium along with it, allows you to control the Chromium version used, and you can be 100% certain that everything that works on that Chromium version will continue to do so, irrespective of the edition or number of updates installed on the user's computer.


Webapps have been dealing with this for years, it's not anywhere as painful as you are making it seem. Pick a base version to support, use feature detection to add anything new, and you're golden. The existing browser APIs cover 99% of all apps' needs already, and when you're doing this you can always hand-off things to the native layer as needed.

Electron sets a very unrealistic eternal-greenfield-development standard that is nothing like developing for the web.


It still might be a reasonable tradeoff for me, for some projects but regardless: thank you, that adds some nuance that I didn't get from your earlier comment.


> irrespective of the edition or number of updates installed on the user's computer.

That is the problem though, some user expected software to meet the platform he is using, use latest function the platform introduce, meet the brand new style guide. Claims the software is creepyware if it isn't.

And of course, the developer don't have infinite time and can't meet every demands the users request.

Making functions works between different platform is tough enough. The developer is unlikely to have enough time handles all extra optional platform best practices under the situation that developer don't have enough time to make one software for each platform at first place.


It sounds like that, but I don't think it's really true. I think that only means that with the previous tradeoffs available, they chose to keep being tracked. No reason not to try something new and maybe they'll choose something different.


Good example. First I've seen, and it doesn't apply to me so I will continue using them as I have, but good example.


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