I'm thinking about implementing it in a web app, not because I want to access any google service. just to base my app's sessions on the users google session - and therefore avoid writing to code to perform user registration etc...
interested to hear on anyone else's experience with the google oauth2.0 API, positive or negative.
@Valentincognito cool, yes it looks really simple. But I notice the method calls have changed and there seems to be no reference documentation for methods and methods signatures etc developers.google.com/api-client-library/php/guide/…
Did you find the lack of documentation a problem at all?
hah.. yes I have implemented a registration and login system using laravel 4. It was a bit of work but I had no problems with it. I thought laravel "all or nothing" framework though? is it possible to use individual components like say Symfony? that would be interesting
@the_velour_fog I am afraid to not be able to answer that question
I have never tried
@the_velour_fog I am actually never sure what's the best practice with Oauth 2.0, but usually if I only need to login users and not access any google services later I do it this way: login button -> get google access token -> get user profile with token -> write username / picture etc.. in DB -> log the user via a combination of an ID and a random hash -> save the session
and every time the session is expired I just get the token again -> get info -> check if the user exist in the DB if yes log in the user if not create it and log in
you can get a browser extension, so if you have buillt an API, but haven't got the front end ajax requests written, you can do POST's to your API and see what your backend is returning
@Valentincognito I think I will write a test prototype similar to what you described in your message above: in the init code, check if $_GET['code'] authorization code or $_GET['error'] exists. if it does, run $client->authenticate($_GET['code']);
and set access token $access_token = $client->getAccessToken(); and then put the access token in the users $_SESSION
after that check if the $_SESSION['access_token'] is set, if so let the user see protected content
and give them a "logout" link which unset $_SESSION. if $_GET['code'] is not set, then only show them the link to request an authorisation code from google
@Valentincognito my personal site is so secure that I cannot access it . why can't you access?
Refactor of Brushes: - UI\Draw\Brush abstract UI\Draw\Brush\Gradient - UI\Draw\Brush\LinearGradient - UI\Draw\Brush\RadialGradient UI\Draw\Color Improvements: - Direct access to channels by name (r, g, b, a) as properties, (case ins...
this is the worst one I've been through myself.. that first picture at the top right was a two tier road that sandwiched.. got to see that personally (thankfully after the danger had passed)
After the christchurch earthquake, the NZ government compensated homeowners who lost their homes, by bailing out a "too big to fail" insurance company who couldn't pay for out the en mass building insurance claims. That and the cost of rebuilding Christchurch has caused NZ government expenditure to balloon to 55% of the GDP of the country.
@Wes In a way we were very lucky. Two bay area baseballs teams were competing in the World Series when it hit - usually a lot more people would've been driving on that freeway at the time.
oscillations so close to the ground are scary. i was at the 5th or something floor in a building that time i was in a quake, and the building moved of like a meter oscillating... but on the ground it didn't felt like a big one. i can only imagine how scary it would be in a tall building during a seriously big quake. unless made of steel i don't think buildings have enough strength to resist more than few centimeters distortion
What's scary about earthquakes is not only that they're strong, but they're often close to the harmonic frequency of most large buildings
Like pushing a swing at the right time makes it go higher and higher, pushing a building at the right times would make it sway more and more, until it can't handle the distortion.
20 years today since 16-yr-old Damien Nettles went #missing. The case stays open. Call us on 101 with new facts:… https://twitter.com/i/web/status/793739523771498496
it appears to be common knowledge that the young lad was killed by a drug dealer, by accident ... the drug dealer died, overdosed in some crack house ... the poor lads mother will likely never get her answer, she left and lives in texas ...
@pmmaga Not actually used New Relic, so I'm not aware of all how they compare but for error report handling there's Sentry - their server is open source and you can self-host
@Rich If I understood correctly, it seems like you could order by assignmentId followed by interviewtime. That way, you'll have them already ordered the way you want. Then I would leave to PHP to do the round count and detect the last one. I think doing it on the SQL side is unecessary overcomplication but I may be missing something.
hey guys, so I'm trying to send JSON object from my android app and access data in it by php coding, does that look right to you? pastebin.com/MDDw5qfp
@JoeWatkins I realised as I was doing it that the ordering is totally wrong towards the end, it feels disconnected and some stuff is just not that well explained
@PeeHaa Well it certainly helped that Jeremy has played with a lot of this stuff in the past
No, that was just not really practical, and frankly I'm kind of happy about that fact as well because if there's going to be a video it needs to be better
@Jimbo It was certainly the most beneficial. If you had to take a talk that was the most "something everyone should be doing but isn't", it would have been Dans
I'm thinking of replying to Stas' call for help regarding security patch reviews. So this is where the self-doubt and imposter syndrome sets in. Can't bring myself to hit send :/
@JoeWatkins speaking of baby jesus. my son has a book about the xmas story. he looked at it yesterday and when he saw baby jesus in it, he joyfully exclaimed "baby! doodoo!"
should i introduce a set of functions in some classes that could definitely be useful but it's absolutely nonessential and that in practice i'd add just to optimize some existing internal functionality
@JoeWatkins in my defence I did not know the picture was being taken and I was kind of preoccupied with working out how I was going to feed 5000 people
imo no, don't do that ... don't make the public API more complex than it must be to do it's job, you might think you are saving someone a second by making something that should be private public, but you are only costing them time when at some time in the future, you figure you can change this "non-essential" part of the API, or you're only costing yourself a headache when you figure out a better way of doing whatever you are doing and want to change that API ...
@DaveRandom fair one, that's an occupying thought ... easy answer, obviously ... magic ...
raising all that money, to make some soft toys, for what is a serious issue, doesn't seem right to me, if we were funding their production, and for example, a stall at at least some conferences, then I'm convinced by the argument that their presence is enough, but their presence on my window sill, is not enough ...
having rainbows in the foyer of big conferences, that actually raises awareness ... the existence of a soft toy in our offices doesn't really ...
"Out of the blue" is an informal English language idiom that describes an event that occurs unexpectedly, without any warning or preparation. It is used as an adverb. The "blue" in the phrase refers to the sky, one from which a sudden plane falling is unexpected, thus it comes 'out of the blue'.
Longer and more explicit variations include out of the clear blue sky and out of a clear blue sky.
== See also ==
ex nihilo ("out of nothing")
== References... ==
@JoeWatkins obviously just putting it in a office will likely not do too much good if it doesn't also see action supporting it. At one job, I called out my coworkers whenever they called something gay when they meant something negative. I always replied that gay is not a swearword. They gave me weird looks in the beginning but I think they eventually got it.
@tereško I had, but not sure exactly what it meant .. I looked it up ... that's valid I suppose ...
but, having organized the thoughts and resources of so many people, having gained their support for a really important thing, to just make a toy with it ... I don't have the words, wasted opportunity is as close as I can get ...
you don't donate to a charity, you fund the activities of a sole trader (yourself), or you register another valid entity to receive the money, not a charity ...
you could have figured out something better, I'm sure of it ... there would be no problem using the money to fund a loan to anything non-charitble, and the repayments of the loan can either be written off, or if the entity generates money, it can be legitimately donated to a charitable cause, or underwrite another loan to sustain activities ...
I'd really love to see a rainbow booth at conferences, that's what I imagined when I heard about the campaign, guess I'm just disappoint to not see that ...