

Why would Iran claim it then?


Why would Iran claim it then?


Normally the certificate signing authority should never see, not need to see anybody’s private key, so no.


I replaced the hinge on our freezer door with about half an hour of design time and a tiny amount of filament. Previously the fix required replacing the whole freezer door.
That fix alone paid for the printer.
Now I’m putting orthopedic insoles. It’s been a lot more effort since it required learning how to use TPU, but now I can just size the shoe and send the file.


OP’s choice of the word “heavier” is interesting because you could argue that the information density of a compressed file is greater than that of an uncompressed one.
Of course that’s abusing the metaphor a bit.
OP: maybe try larger and smaller next time.


It’s almost like we’re a multiparty democracy or something.
The press and others tend to report proposals by one part or another as though they have already been passed into law. I think it makes for better headlines.
And Andy Yen uses it for what agenda he has, like moving into cheaper German data centres or whatever.


It’s almost like we’re not a single monolithic entity or something. Go figure.


We have our own system, Twint. Wero was based on it, but so far they’re not interchangeable.


Someday we’ll have Gate gate, or maybe even another scandal at the Watergate complex, so Watergate gate.
I can’t wait!


It seems that this might be useful to add to this pile of information:
https://meta.discourse.org/t/federation-support-for-discourse/90921


The Mastodon project put a lot of energy into a high quality plushy.
OK. My bad. I was going by the headline. Now I see that there’s nothing to substantiate it.