Before backbone there was already knockout.js which was based on signals. Which is what all the hip frameworks are converging on now anyway. You could have bypassed all the drama.
You want an idp who verified that the account belongs to a specific citizen. There needs to be some loop closing between your bsn (akin to a social security number) and user accounts. That in itself is not something you can just handoff to auth0 or that you want different departments to self select and self-host.
Digid is used to submit taxes and for getting benefits from the government.
It’s mostly the same. But if you realize you forgot to add something to the dirst commit while you’re putting stuff in the second commit then this avoids having to create a fixup commit and then rebasing that afterwards.
It’s actually worse than that. It wasn’t always whole coubtries who decided to adopt (or not) but cities and sometimes people within cities (i.e. the protestants in the city would be lagging, or maybe I’m misremembering and this was about people who where abroad)
In any case, for awhile, the date you picked depended on who you were writing to. And then also the relative standing. If he was of much lower standing you might force your own calendar on them.
Also, I think with the previous calendar it was always a bit debatable what year december belonged to. I can’t quite remember the details.
We still have this sort of thing today. In the occupied West Bank, Israeli settlers change to daylight savings time on a different day than the Palestinians
Arizona in the US does not observe DST at all. Within Arizona is the Navajo nation, which does observe DST. Within the Navajo nation are Hopi enclaves, where DST is not observed, and finally, within one of those Hopi enclaves is a Navajo community where, again, DST is observed.
> It’s actually worse than that. It wasn’t always whole coubtries who decided to adopt (or not) but cities and sometimes people within cities (i.e. the protestants in the city would be lagging, or maybe I’m misremembering and this was about people who where abroad)
There was some of that indeed, depending on the centralization of the country e.g. Spain and France adopted the gregorian calendar wholesale because the king decreed it, but in less centralised countries like the Dutch Republic or Switzerland it happened by region (the seven catholic cantons switched to the gregorian calendar in 1584, the protestant canton only switched over piece by piece during the 18th century, and Schiers and Grüsch were the last remnants of Julian calendar in the entirety of western europe, only adopting the gregorian calendar in 1812).
... and then there's Sweden, which started on a plan to gradually approach the Gregorian calendar by skipping leap years over 40 years, except they immediately forgot to skip the second and third so concluded the plan was stupid, then instead of switching to gregorian they reverted to julian, before finally switching to gregorian 40 years after that.
This reminds me of the strange fact that the New Year used to be considered to be March 25th, so for a while people wrote dates in the months of January through March with 2 years like "10 January 1708/09" to resolve the ambiguity.
Where I live the municipality generally has people (money-coaches) to help. Maybe just go over to yours and see what help
there is? In general, when you’re in a bad place the advice would be to go off the internet and towards actual humans I think.
Well, in this attack, you're using the vulenerable dev to modify their code to run a protobuf schema that's vulnerable; so then it can inject that vulnerability to the client code, and then you're exfilitrating 10's of users (the dev who ran this code isnt very popular).
One of my favourite (dutch) children’s books is “400 degrees in the shade” which explores exactly that. A human colony sticking to the terminator. (It’s quite dystopian though)
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