Legit question, what exactly is Google App Engine? Is it simply a hosting server where you put your backend files (similar to a hosted web server like Digital Ocean where you host your website)?
Platform as a Service means you get access to run code in a stack without any direct access to the hardware. Like Engine Yard or Heroku. You don't have to worry about maintaining any infrastructure. That's a much different approach to the cloud than say AWS or Digital Ocean, which are IaaS (*Infrastructure as a Service) companies that do give you access to the hardware.
But... you're absolutely correct, there is not a single thing describing this product in Google's enormous documentation cloud.google.com/appengine/docs
I thought it was obvious but whatever...I didn't understand what those buzzwords were trying to tell me on most "informative" sites, so I came here to ask people who might have worked with it and would be able to answer me.
@Fabor How far do you get? If you never get past BIOS-driven stuff then the other gfx card is fucked and swapping the other one out should solve the problem, if you can hit Win and get a safety cut-out/boot it's probably the CPU overheating because you don't have the drivers installed (yet) so it's stressing the CPU because it doesn't know you have a GPU so it's routing the Aero stuff through the CPU
The CPU is known to be running hot and erratic anyway, reseat the heatsink and check the pressure and circulation in the coolant circuit
Also in the latter case, booting into safe mode will help because Aero will be disabled
And flash the mobo bios to the latest version, could simply be a hw compat issue that is now resolved
You are running high-end kit, but it's not mega new high-end kit so teething compat issues are likely to be resolved by now
Same goes for gfx card firmware, if it's user servicable
Of course, it could simply be a hw issue, in which case I'd suggest paying someone who does this for a job to diagnose it because it will take them 2hrs where it would take you (and I) 2 days
But try all of the above first
(if you reseat any coolers then clean the surfaces properly and use a fresh coat of paste)
I love how a question that's really just saying "I have no fucking clue how to use insert_id" turns into everyone coming up with the most complex, defective, and least efficient way possible to over complicate what is essentially the most trivial problem a beginner could ever experience.
It's like people think the more complicated their answer is on SO the more likely it is to gain them clout or something.
will this check for a number, not a string:
if (isset($_POST['to'])&& is_int($_POST['to']) && $_POST['to']!=''){
$to=$_POST['to'];
} else{
$to='';
$errors.="SOMETHING<br>";
}
@php_purest $_POST['to'] cannot possibly ever be an integer. PHP parses all input from the outside world as a string ultimately so you will have to use something like filter_input or filter_var or ctype_digit there.
is there a sane way to persist an undiferentiated sack of designer specified shit key value pairs that isn't as much a pain in the ass as an EAV and not as dirty as jsoning an array?
it will be a bunch of flags that will end up triggering specific formatting / behavior at the presentation layer so it won't need to be searchable ... I'll probably just json it and tuck it in a related table.
> Interpretation of the fragment identifier is performed solely by the agent that dereferences a URI; the fragment identifier is not passed to other systems during the process of retrieval. This means that some intermediaries in Web architecture (such as proxies) have no interaction with fragment identifiers and that redirection (in HTTP [RFC2616], for example) does not account for fragments.
it is nice, having spent the most part of a decade with just a duck (girlfriend, don't tell her I said that), solving bugs is one thing, the number of RFC's and actually bits of software (phpdbg, jitfu, recki) that have come from this room is staggering .. I've never been in a more productive place ...
we don't talk about php enough is my only criticism ...
hi everyone, i am facing a problem while working with paypal api,i am using express checkout. i am in testing mode everything working fine but in ipn response i didn't get product name, id, invoice, amount.. :( instead i get item_name_1 = something, invoice = abc1234, but i post a valid invoice and item_name_1 name
DNS spoofing (or DNS cache poisoning) is a computer hacking attack, whereby data is introduced into a Domain Name System (DNS) resolver's cache, causing the name server to return an incorrect IP address, diverting traffic to the attacker's computer (or any other computer).
== Overview of the Domain Name System ==
A domain name system server translates a human-readable domain name (such as example.com) into a numerical IP address that is used to route communications between nodes. Normally if the server doesn't know a requested translation it will ask another server, and the process conti...
@Sherif Yes, but I know I'm going to go eat some cereal shortly.
user1804599
What's ARP poisoning?
user1804599
> In computer networking, ARP spoofing, ARP cache poisoning, or ARP poison routing, is a technique by which an attacker sends (spoofed) Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) messages onto a local area network. Generally, the aim is to associate the attacker's MAC address with the IP address of another host, such as the default gateway, causing any traffic meant for that IP address to be sent to the attacker instead.
FIG 1: Me, and my beard, talking at a conference.In real life, I'm a pretty awkward guy at first; I'm prone to stuttering, have no sense of direction, I forget names, the faces of people I've met, places I've been, and find it impossible to be assertive, or confident in any way. I'm pretty much a mess. Some of these symptoms disappear once I get to know you better, but first impressions coun…
What's even more fascinating is the packets from my cell phone must bounce of radio towers to get to a satellite a thousand miles above the earth to be bounced around other satellites in order to be beamed back down and cross thousands of miles of trans Atlantic fiber optic cables so that they can reach my ISP, make their way to my router, and transmit a wireless signal to my laptop.
All the spirit of this thing we call the Intrawebz :D
That's perfectly fine.
It's the same as if you would share your answers/questions on Facebook, Twitter or G+ for which there are explicit share buttons.
@PeeHaa the directive list at the top of the page has a "changelog" column, currently empty. I would say that add/removal info should be in that column, but anything detailing changes in behaviour is fine in the description for the directive in question
@PeeHaa Yeh I've always been apprehensive to create a secure. subdomain for anything, feels like asking for trouble
@PeeHaa Probably more like "Numbers must be in the range from 200 to 1000000, inclusive." or "Valid numbers are those in the range from 200 to 1000000, inclusive."
'@mAyUrDeVmUrArI there is alot ot the process. You need to identify the point of entry. Do a diff on your source to see any changes. Checkout processes on production server. Consider if data has been leaked (like user password)... in the end, I would pay someone to help me