That's too bad
helvetpuli
I've had dns-01 validation running for a while now. It's not difficult, just a paradigm shift. I spent a minute just now looking for a concise how-to for you and didn't find one, so I suppose I'll have to write it.
I'll bookmark this comment so I can find you once I've done that.
It's almost like we're a multiparty democracy or something.
The press and others tend to report proposals by one part or another as though they have already been passed into law. I think it makes for better headlines.
And Andy Yen uses it for what agenda he has, like moving into cheaper German data centres or whatever.
It's almost like we're not a single monolithic entity or something. Go figure.
Nope. It very much did not catch on. We call a message received by email "un mail" and then to avoid overloading we have" le courier". Best, mark
French moves just as quickly. The Académie Française exists to make sure the French you learn in school doesn't keep up.
Sorry. @turdas@suppo.fi is correct.
The French version of the article uses the term jour-amende which is precisely a fine based on a day's earnings.
Yeah. That's what I was getting at.
To call this particular intersection engineered is a bit of a stretch. It looks more like it's just there without have had any thought put into it at all.
You're responding to a comment using Swiss speed limits as an example. Here in Switzerland changes in the speed in an urban area do not cause changes in rural areas.
Anyways, I suppose I should thank you for providing more evidence that drivers are selfish morons.
OP's choice of the word "heavier" is interesting because you could argue that the information density of a compressed file is greater than that of an uncompressed one.
Of course that's abusing the metaphor a bit.
OP: maybe try larger and smaller next time.