Nice! And MIT too. Perfect; I’ve given it a star now.
Shine Get
Nice! And MIT too. Perfect; I’ve given it a star now.
I agree. I don’t have the time but someone should point this out to the dev via an issue on GitHub.
So basically don’t use this in anything commercial because the phrase “feel free” is different to legally libre and gratis. I personally wouldn’t touch this until it’s released under a reputable license.
Shame they didn’t use a proper license when publishing.
My very experience at university. Projectile vomit all over the place.
My bad. Must have made a slip up on the swipe keyboard. I meant “years”. I’ve edited my post to correct.
That rear projection beast was the best darn television for tests years until Pioneer made plasmas. I miss ours deeply and wish we’d had the space to keep it (especially for retro gaming and the yearly playing of the Star Wars laser disk).
Why does the embargo remain? What does the US gain from this? (I’m rather out of the loop)
What’s the reference?
Reference for the admission?
And it’s made by a Bitwarden developer.
They highlighted it was a bug and said it would be fixed very soon after it was flagged. It was addressed in a matter of days. You can build the server with the /p:DefineConstants=“OSS”
flag still and you can build the clients with the bitwarden_license
folder deleted again (now they’ve fixed it).
I don’t understand why you’re throwing FUD about this. Building without the Bitwarden Licensed code has been possible for years and those components under that license have been enterprise focused (such as SSO). The client is still GPL and the server is still AGPL.
This has been the way for years.
Cool. They got that sorted nice and quickly.
Edit:
I don’t get why people think they’re suddenly doing stuff under a different license to subvert the open nature of the project. They’ve been totally transparent on what isn’t part of the GPL/AGPL licensed code for years.
SSO, the password health service, organisation auth requests, member access report blah blah have been enterprise features under the Bitwarden License for ages and they architected the projects in a clear and transparent way to build without those features since they added them.
Mind blowing and this has to be my favourite Tiny Desk of the year. I can never get enough of Kamasi. Thanks for sharing!
This is actually why I use macOS at work - I wasn’t able to get a Linux box approved by IT but they happily support macOS and I get to use basically all the same software I do on Linux.
Lost me immediately with “Blockchain Socialist”.
All that money and engineering to have a human still needed to do the job of a human lol.
Exactly. Source it from upstream at build time or something so it’s transparent.
I’d say that sound was more on the side of industrial / hardcore jungle, blending in rock and pop, with touches of shoegaze. Dubstep grew out of grime, and drum and bass, etc grew out of jungle.
He’s a DJ Hype track from 1993 that gives you a taste of where jungle was at then which might help you see where dubstep came from.