

Yep, true, soldering really kills reparability for most.


Yep, true, soldering really kills reparability for most.


Didn’t they go with soldered RAM with their desktop PC, though?


While I’m with you, there is one advantage: RAM can work on higher speeds when soldered and few actually upgrade it when not soldered.


Java and similar (i.e. c#) are memory safe and run on garbage collected runtime.


Memory safety is something compiler understands and has under control, this stuff it does not. Nor it should.


Rust or any other compiler can’t catch those type of bugs because they are not bugs at compiler level 🤷


Indeed, fixed.


But why are the names camel Pascal cased? It’s a little bit more annoying to type.


So they will go after Orange family, right?


Go with either kotlin or c#, I’d say. Both are high level and easy to start with. If you don’t have a preference, pick one of the two randomly.


If one mostly works with windows ecosystem, then it makes sense. That said I still work plenty on legacy windows app, but I’m fine with Linux and windows VM guest.


How did they find the problem that fast?


Any package manager is prone to supply chain attacks, npm is now affected because of a shit tone of dependencies every package brings 🤷


Yes, it’s incredibly nice, versatile, powerful and efficient. Me being a .net dev since first beta. That said it’s still a GC based runtime if that matters to you. I’m also looking more and more at kotlin as an alternative. If I was to look for a non GC language, I’d go with rust.


We’re not talking this specific case, we are talking in general. In that case the data was obviously not replaced properly.


Once more, the customer identification data is striped out, there is nothing to leak, unless you have retain mandatory data. And yes, you have to have financial records for your company or how do you think it works?


Let’s say your deleted customer paid for some goods and you delete this data, how do you know what was sold, to what number of customers and for how much etc?


This is a common practice in databases, you just mark record as deleted and make data unidentifiable.
Does it have fillet and other such tools? I vaguely remember it doesn’t, but it is years since I’ve used it.
Yeah. That’s really bad.