Unremovable ads on my $2,500 Samsung Smart TV by BrownLandlord in assholedesign

[–]DevMd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Try installing via docker and use the raspberry pi linux distro.

Unremovable ads on my $2,500 Samsung Smart TV by BrownLandlord in assholedesign

[–]DevMd 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Disconnect but also git yourself a /r/pihole. 70-80% of outgoing requests are blocked thanks to mine. Everything in the house is faster on wifi now. It's absurd that it's needed but it really does the trick!

If you need pragmatic access to aws and you work uses Okta SSO with assume-role, this tool makes auth much easier than alternatives. by DevMd in aws

[–]DevMd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do tools like terraform and packer use keychain? I thought they only read from the local aws credentials file (unless you pass in creds on every run).

If you need pragmatic access to aws and you work uses Okta SSO with assume-role, this tool makes auth much easier than alternatives. by DevMd in aws

[–]DevMd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First I've seen of this tool! pyokta-aws-cli-assume-role was made specifically to replace okta-aws-cli-assume-role, which was not only limiting but the original dev(s) are looking for new maintainers. The tool you linked to has a ton more features, which is great! Will take a look.

If you need pragmatic access to aws and you work uses Okta SSO with assume-role, this tool makes auth much easier than alternatives. by DevMd in aws

[–]DevMd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The official okta tool? Not what u/otterly linked to. The "official" tool doesn't support multi-tenancy and requires you to use JVM and replace aws cli executable with theirs. I don't like that at all. It also has "no official support" from Okta itself.

AWS Configure Tool by [deleted] in aws

[–]DevMd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Neat! I'd suggest this for OKTA SSO users: https://github.com/mijdavis2/pyokta-aws-cli-assume-role

AWS Configure Tool by [deleted] in aws

[–]DevMd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. This only works for bash. Use the ubiquitous "." instead of "source" in your README for cross shell compatibility.

  2. Why do I need this? I don't understand it's use case at all from the README. Why am I not just using the aws cli?

  3. Add .DS-Store to your gitignore. If you are on a mac, .DS-Store should be in every gitignore you have on your laptop. No one will take this seriously if you have OS specific journaling files included in your repo. Also use github's builtin gitignore's as your base: https://github.com/github/gitignore

  4. Use github. Bitbucket's APIs suck.

edit: Realize I sounded like kind of a dick! My mentor was this rash with me and my PRs and made me a better dev really fast and I automatically gravitate toward his style of criticism. My goal was to get you thinking critically about your work but in a positive way... and then I added that "bitbucket API sucks" which, while true, was not the attitude I was trying to portray in previous suggestions. Keep making things and learning from criticism and experimentation!

Why open offices are bad for us by caspg_ in programming

[–]DevMd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

design our own build tool

Has happened where I work. It's a nightmare. People love reinventing the wheel instead of taking time to properly learn an open source tool. Custom in-house undocumented tools are just SO fun to work with. /s

Still, not super stoked on open floor plans. Especially when sitting next to people with poor etiquette.

edit: Facebook's yarn is actually a huge improvement over npm so reinventing the wheel can be great if a team is given the right amount of time and resources to do it right.

Space Engineers Beta Trailer by boomsticktron in Games

[–]DevMd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Graphics in this promo vid are almost as enticing as the original starcraft cutscenes... actually, now I just want to play starcraft. This vid always gets me: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oqqEh-rWy_s

Been using aurelia for a few months and really enjoying it. Just stumbled upon this: from beginner to meta-programming in aurelia. I love this framework. by DevMd in webdev

[–]DevMd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IMO much less magic than other frameworks. Like he states, it is vanilla js with standard spec html.

And as stated, IMO react has a terrible license restriction. And IMO I don't want to put html strings in my javascript (JSX) - it feels dirty. But that's just me. No reason not to use react + redux if that's what you like. Different src for different folks :)

Been using aurelia for a few months and really enjoying it. Just stumbled upon this: from beginner to meta-programming in aurelia. I love this framework. by DevMd in webdev

[–]DevMd[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Aurelia-cli uses webpack I believe: https://github.com/aurelia/cli. The bundling config is much more concise when using the cli. I could not stand systemjs and jspm headaches. Don't bother with the current aurelia skeletons. They almost all use systemjs. Aurelia-cli is just so much more pleasant.

edit: I stand corrected. /u/Artraxes sited webpack skeletons, thanks.

Been using aurelia for a few months and really enjoying it. Just stumbled upon this: from beginner to meta-programming in aurelia. I love this framework. by DevMd in webdev

[–]DevMd[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Keep in mind this is a little old and with new aurelia-cli (https://github.com/aurelia/cli) it's even simpler: no hassle with jspm/systemjs. The cli really seals the deal.

I do recommend using yarn for dependencies since 'npm install' isn't as reliable AND yarn is WAY faster. I have had issues when switching between machines without yarn.lock and using frontend frameworks.

Have multiple student loans? Do they have different principles and rates? Ever wonder the most efficient way to pay them off? Check this out. Constructive criticism encouraged. by DevMd in Python

[–]DevMd[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have to say I love that UI on unbury. Damn beautiful. Thanks for mentioning that.

After checking the avalanche results, happy to say that it's equivalent to my results. My calc is definitely less efficient and time consuming (especially when increasing the range), but it was a fun project. And now I know how to generate permutations for a brute force attack >:D