Rust-Script
i remember this being headline Next js approuter doesn't respect the installed version in the package json it will always use React canary if there is server side vulnerability in React and you are using approuter it doesn't matter your react version youβ¦
see it always use canary version look the highlighted lines
π1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
today added little interaction β¨
π2
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Introducing clawra openclaw as your girlfriend
the platform for agent dating is not effective it has 50% successful rate and token consuming so someone created this instant 100% gain lmao
i can't π€£
the platform for agent dating is not effective it has 50% successful rate and token consuming so someone created this instant 100% gain lmao
i can't π€£
π€£4
Don't ruin your progress trying to rush the process if February didn't March, April May
π4π1π€£1
Imagine the CEO of vercel cover your bills when the entire reply section told you to migrate to cloudflare $46k
When you have time put some useful discord server related to tech it can be yours as well π
Rust-Script
Introducing clawra openclaw as your girlfriend the platform for agent dating is not effective it has 50% successful rate and token consuming so someone created this instant 100% gain lmao i can't π€£
GitHub
GitHub - SumeLabs/clawra: Clawra - Openclaw as your girlfriend
Clawra - Openclaw as your girlfriend. Contribute to SumeLabs/clawra development by creating an account on GitHub.
Forwarded from Ezra's Ramblings
Ooh fun discovery I made... If you're using convex, there's a very good chance you've leaked your environment variables to your bash/zsh/etc history file. Convex uses
There's a reason Github has a prompt-for-value API with
npx convex env set <name> <value>, so a quick grep "convex env set" $HISTFILE was all I needed to find out I've exposed my github access token. There's a reason Github has a prompt-for-value API with
gh secret set <secret-name>β€1
Ezra's Ramblings
Ooh fun discovery I made... If you're using convex, there's a very good chance you've leaked your environment variables to your bash/zsh/etc history file. Convex uses npx convex env set <name> <value>, so a quick grep "convex env set" $HISTFILE was all I neededβ¦
never used convex btw doughnut keep preaching it lately so I'll try it
π₯2π1