You can't link your government ID to your social media account. The legislation doesn't allow social media companies to gather this data. It's specifically not allowed.
In other words: this legislation is useless, and entirely stupid, and kids will bypass it trivially. Teenagers are exceptionally good at bypassing that which they find stupid, or gets in their way of what they consider to be fun, or a right.
I used Scribus. Top choice for replacing Publisher by open source software. Scribus is very intuitive and with enough time I could churn out a beautiful looking effective resume on my first try
My favorite reaction to today’s news is this one-liner from a guy on Twitter/X: “The average IQ of both companies has increased.”
My friend, that was NZ prime minister Robert Muldoon who was quoted as saying “every time a New Zealander emigrates to sun themselves on the beaches of Bondi, the average IQ of both countries increases.”
There is also the “Fuck off support ticket”. I got this from FreshService - they changed the way they did loan requests in such a way that you could loan out one item twice with the status of delivered on both requests. So then you have two people who have been delivered the same item, which is clearly impossible.
Anyway, after arguing with them from for months, they acknowledge it as a bug. I wait for it to be fixed, months roll away. Then they tell me it has been lodged as an “enhancement request”.
Don’t deal with FreshService. Needless to say, we are soon to be leaving them.
You can use `git format-patch` to export a range of commits from your local git tree as a set of patches. You can then use `git send-email` to send that patch set out to the appropriate mailing list and maintainers (or just do it in one step, send-email accepts a similar commit range instead of patch files). It talks directly to an SMTP server you have configured in your `.gitconfig` and sends out e-mail.
Of course, `git send-email` has a plethora of options, e.g. you'd typically add a cover letter for a patch set.
Also, in the Linux kernel tree, there are some additional helper scripts that you might want to run first, like `checkpatch.pl` for some basic sanity checks and `get_maintainer.pl` that tells you the relevant maintainers for the code your patch set touches, so you can add them to `--cc`.
The patches are reviewed/discussed on the mailing list that you sent them to.
On the receiving side, as a maintainer, you'd use `git am` (apply mail) that can import the commits from a set of mbox files into your local git tree.
In other words: this legislation is useless, and entirely stupid, and kids will bypass it trivially. Teenagers are exceptionally good at bypassing that which they find stupid, or gets in their way of what they consider to be fun, or a right.
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