2-Factor authentication
Click Continue when your authenticator app shows a code with two leading zeroes.
2-Factor authentication
Click Continue when your authenticator app shows a code with two leading zeroes.
We don’t even have that rule with CVS. Sometimes you have a merge conflict after cvs up, well then you fix it. That’s how it’s supposed to work.
Two of my favourite tools!
That’s handled by virtue of GetWittyReplyEx
being d to
GetWittyReplyExA
and GetWittyReplyExW
right? Just be aware that nMaxReplyMessage
needs to be specified in bytes (excluding the null terminator!) but the returned length is in characters.
Note that while Visual C++'s msvcrt doesn’t implement this POSIX function officially, there’s a nonstandard _ofcyfpos_s()
and it will in fact warn you that any use of the official ofcyfpos()
is unsafe. The semantics are slightly different (it’ll return 1 on success instead of the length of the reply) so you can’t just the problem away.
Don’t forget to set the cbSize
of the GETWITTYREPLYEXINFO
structure before passing it to GetWittyReplyEx()
or you’ll get funny things happening to your stack!
Windows 2.1 in a VM on Linux viewed over Spice in an SSH-forwarded X11 session running on WSL2 with XWayland forwarded over RDP to a Windows 11 desktop: https://deskto.ps/u/sjmulder/d/fztjse
I like Void, it feels a little more like a BSD. But I’ve only really used it for experimentation, no idea what it’s like as a daily driver.
You could also try an actual BSD. OpenBSD has a very clear style and direction which I like but be careful when partitioning, they have their own ‘disklabel’ system. Updates are really streamlined with syspatch and sysupgrade.
NetBSD had a nice TUI installer. It may appear a bit less focussed on its aims but has a lot going for it: many supporter platforms, a friendly community, etc.
There’s also FreeBSD, DragonflyBSD, possibly more but I don’t have much experience with those.
“I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer, 'cause you guys paid for all this. So seriously, for every Amazon customer out there, and every Amazon employee, thank you from the bottom of my heart, very much. It’s very appreciated.”
~ Jeff Bezos, July 2021, as he departs for space tourism