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+1. “oh you’ll surely be good if you are early, the train can’t possibly already be overcrowded when it arrives”
I suspect the sales website can’t actually reserve seats itself, but just passes along the request to some other system, which enters “LOL, NO!” in that field for a train that was long-since fully booked.
My guess is that it printed this “null” reservation slip to let you know that the reservation had failed, because otherwise people would think that the printer wasn’t working? It prints the ticket(s), then the reservation(s), then the receipt listing how many things were printed.
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They only issue as many tickets as seats
That’s… optimistic?
TFW “npm install somePackage” adds hundreds of names to your supplier list, some of whom aren’t even adults let alone companies, and the policy says that each new supplier needs to go through a thorough vetting process.
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Seen in a code review (paraphrased):
“Why does this break when you add comments in the middle?”
40,075,000m circumference / 86,400s = 463m/s?
Apparently they didn’t include the single quote at the beginning because they wanted to hint at the exploit without actually triggering it.
(and Lemmy seems to combine two dashes into one)
With an address in 's-Hertogenbosch to help people who are lazy about escaping.
Just noticed that the listing for ; DROP TABLE “COMPANIES”; – LTD has been redacted by the government website‽
This guy seemed to be campaigning on not prosecuting war criminals, so military lawyers might be the first ones with difficult decisions to make.
Seems excessive to convert everything to rust when you can use std::shared_ptr and std::weak_ptr to eliminate the memory safety issue?
Similar with the computer magazines, before they started coming with floppy disks.
The official statistics lists how frequently that occurs.