how to create we compared all cheap web hosting services,how to create tebale we compared all cheap web hosting services
Visit our website for more information:
https://computerpakistan.com/
how to create we compared all cheap web hosting services,how to create tebale we compared all cheap web hosting services
Visit our website for more information:
https://computerpakistan.com/
Congratulations to the inaugural members of the new Project Update Working Group.
This is a new working group tasked with helping maintainers prepare contributed projects for the next major release of Drupal core.
The inaugural members are as follows:
Norah Medlin (tekNorah) (provisional)
Vladimir Roudakov (vladimiraus)
Sven Decabooter (svendecabooter)
Naveen Valecha (naveenvalecha)
Kristen Pol (Kristen Pol)
Matt Glaman (mglaman)
Darren Oh (Darren Oh)
Mark Casias (markie)
Kim Pepper (kim.pepper)
Björn Brala (bbrala)
Lucas Hedding (heddn)
Pedro Cambra (pcambra)
Allan Chappell (generalredneck)
Jakob Perry (japerry)
Timo Huisman (Timo Huisman) (provisional)
The group will work in the coming weeks to establish processes and changes required to Drupal.org to facilitate the role.
If you wish to get in touch and say congratulations, you can find them in the #project-update-working-group channel on slack.
In a recent message to the tech@
mailing list, Omar Polo (op@
) asked for comments or ok
s for a patches implementing a change of table protocols. A little later, Gilles Chehade (gilles@
) posted the backstory to the misc@opensmtpd.org
mailing list with the backstory for this change.
The message follows in full below (apparently the otherwise fine marc.info archive site no longer archives the list):
Date: Fri, 03 May 2024 08:22:03 +0000 From: gilles@poolp.org To: misc@opensmtpd.org Subject: smtpd: change the table protocol Hello, This is a copy of a mail I sent to OpenBSD hackers a few days ago so you are aware of work being done on OpenSMTPD by Omar Polo. ~~~ TL;DR: proposal to change table backends wire protocol to one that's closer to filters, it has proven to work for years now, comes with many benefits and it is a very trivial change that we can pull in a handful of hours: https://tmp.omarpolo.com/smtpd-tables.7.html
Four weeks ago in the 14-th TWIF we announced the start of 1.20
testing and the repository management improvements that it brings. Over the years, the concept of a “repository archive” kinda stayed the same. Basically, instead of serving the users the full list of all the versions of all the apps, we give them only the latest three versions for each app, as users will just update to the latest one anyway. This keeps an index update easy to download, and this was improved again a couple of years ago by offering diff-updates (not the full index, just the difference compared to your local index), so if you update once a week you’ll end up downloading 200Kb or less.
Since the Archive will collect old versions continuously, its size grows each cycle, and the index as expected, making working with it a heavy task for your device. For this reason we don’t encourage its use unless it’s really needed, eg. for running on old Android versions, and to disable it when done.
As the Client focus is to draw users to the actual main repo, and not to emphasis the Archive, with the latest repository management design it was decided to treat Archive as an option that users can toggle on, instead of having a separate repo entry. This toggle is in the repo details, “in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.’“, 🙂 oh, I mean under the mirror list. This list is under a work in progress redesign of its own, so it’s a bit finicky to scroll right now, leaving even astute Android users to wonder how an Archive can be added or used.
To be fair, the linked Fedi post above has this information in the first picture, but we understand that we’ve looked a lot at these strings and we are biased to consider them “good enough”. One reason to test these changes as early as possible is to gather feedback from users. If you have thoughts on a better wording, feel free to ping us.
Aurora Store was updated to 4.4.4
and will deemed stable in the next-next index update. You can update now manually if you wish.
Grazer Linuxtage Schedule has changed its application identifier due to some, ahem, alternative centralized store policy. Its users are advised to uninstall and install the new app aptly named: Grazer Linuxtage
NewPipe is reproducible again and was updated to 0.27.0
fixing a lot of bugs users were waiting for months already. We hope future versions get delivered faster.
0.5
to 0.6
0.8.6b1
to 0.8.7b1
1.4.5
to 1.4.6
1.3.8
to 1.3.9
1.3.3
to 1.3.4
1.2.0
to 1.2.1
0.4.1
to 0.4.2
14
to 15
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.0.8-0-g4c8399ad
to 0.0.9-0-g8dc51356
0.6.20
to 0.6.22
1.0.58
to 1.0.61
1.5.5
to 1.5.6
3.3.0
to 3.4.0
2.7.0
to 2.8.0
1.2.8
to 1.3.0
20240412-01
to 20240419-01
0.16.8
to 0.16.9
3.21.0
to 3.21.1
0.5.0
to 0.5.1
2.1.0-beta.5
to 2.1.0-rc.0
1.2.11
to 1.2.12
0.10.8
to 0.10.9
1.7.2
to 1.7.3
2024.1
to 2024.2-beta1
3.8.2
to 3.8.2.1
0.9.15
to 1.0.0
3.29.0 RC1
to 3.29.0
20240421
to 20240424
0.9.9.84
to 0.9.9.90
18.1.0
to 19.0.0
1.1.5
to 1.1.6
1.0.19
to 1.0.19
1.2.46
to 1.2.47
4.9.0
to 4.9.2
3.4.1
to 3.4.2
1.2.0
to 1.2.1
v0.5.5e
to v0.5.5g
1.4.6
to 1.4.8
1.21
to 1.21.1
3.193.9
to 3.194.0
3.7.0
to 3.8.0
0.0.5
to 0.0.6
1.6.0
to 1.6.2
10.9.1
to 10.10.1
5.0.0/X
to 5.0.1/X
6.20.1
to 7.0.0
0.62.0
to 0.62.2
2.7.3
to 2.7.4
220.240411.0
to 225.240417.0
4.11.6
to 4.11.7-patch1
1.0.9
to 1.0.11
0.38.1
to 0.38.2
1.8.1
to 1.8.2
20.0.0.0
to 20.0.1.0
1.10.0
to 1.10.1
2.5.0
to 2.6.0
1.4.13
to 1.4.14
2.5.6
to 2.5.7
18.1.0
to 19.0.0
2.07.04.ose
to 2.07.05.ose
1.5.4
to 1.5.5
3.12.3-beta
to 3.12.4-beta
2.8.0
to 2.8.2
55881
to 55883
Thank you for reading this week’s TWIF 🙂
Please subscribe to the RSS feed in your favourite RSS application to be updated of new TWIFs when they come up.
You are welcome to join the TWIF forum thread. If you have any news from the community, post it there, maybe it will be featured next week 😉
Video by via Dailymotion Source Imagine you’re the master puppet master of your office’s tech setup, but instead of pulling strings, you’re wielding the power of Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP). With RDS Windows Server 2022, you can command your Windows Server Core from anywhere—no need to rush to the server room or be tethered to…
Video by via Dailymotion Source A 29ª edição da Agrishow, em Ribeirão Preto (SP), maior feira de tecnologia agrícola da América Latina, tem como um dos temas principais a participação da tecnologia, inovação e técnica junto ao produtor rural. Para discutir sobre esse assunto, a Jovem Pan entrevistou o diretor da Cati/SAA, Marcos Augusto Franco…