Understand your Mac and iPhone more deeply by tracing the evolution of Mac OS X from prelease to Swift. John Siracusa delivers the details.
You've got two main options:
| import z from "zod"; | |
| export async function safeFetch<T>( | |
| schema: z.Schema<T>, | |
| input: RequestInfo, | |
| init?: RequestInit | |
| ): Promise<T> { | |
| const response = await fetch(input, init); | |
| if (!response.ok) { |
| // I'm tired of extensions that automatically: | |
| // - show welcome pages / walkthroughs | |
| // - show release notes | |
| // - send telemetry | |
| // - recommend things | |
| // | |
| // This disables all of that stuff. | |
| // If you have more config, leave a comment so I can add it!! | |
| { |
ChatGPT appeared like an explosion on all my social media timelines in early December 2022. While I keep up with machine learning as an industry, I wasn't focused so much on this particular corner, and all the screenshots seemed like they came out of nowhere. What was this model? How did the chat prompting work? What was the context of OpenAI doing this work and collecting my prompts for training data?
I decided to do a quick investigation. Here's all the information I've found so far. I'm aggregating and synthesizing it as I go, so it's currently changing pretty frequently.
I have a Linux virtual machine inside a customer's private network. For security, this VM is reachable only via VPN + Citrix + Windows + a Windows SSH client (eg PuTTY). I am tasked to ensure this Citrix design is secure, and users can not access their Linux VM's or other resources on the internal private network in any way outside of using Citrix.
The VM can access the internet. This task should be easy. The VM's internet gateway allows it to connect anywhere on the internet to TCP ports 80, 443, and 8090 only. Connecting to an internet bastion box on one of these ports works and I can send and receive clear text data using netcat. I plan to use good old SSH, listening on tcp/8090 on the bastion, with a reverse port forward configured to expose sshd on the VM to the public, to show their Citrix gateway can be circumvented.
I hit an immediate snag. The moment I try to establish an SSH or SSL connection over o
| /* eslint-disable no-bitwise, no-param-reassign, operator-assignment */ | |
| // Mulberry32 - 32-bit random seed generator | |
| // Source: https://github.com/bryc/code/blob/master/jshash/PRNGs.md#mulberry32 | |
| /** | |
| * Function is used to get the same random value every time to ensure | |
| * data is the same in unit tests and screenshot tests for storybook | |
| * @param seed | |
| * @returns random number based on input seed |
this is a rough draft and may be updated with more examples
GitHub was kind enough to grant me swift access to the Copilot test phase despite me @'ing them several hundred times about ICE. I would like to examine it not in terms of productivity, but security. How risky is it to allow an AI to write some or all of your code?
Ultimately, a human being must take responsibility for every line of code that is committed. AI should not be used for "responsibility washing." However, Copilot is a tool, and workers need their tools to be reliable. A carpenter doesn't have to
| MIT License | |
| Copyright (c) 2021 Daniel Ethridge | |
| Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy | |
| of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal | |
| in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights | |
| to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell | |
| copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is | |
| furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: |