@phoneboy I wonder if they are actually responding to it but without making a fuss about it. I haven't been following this at all as it does not affect me directly, but I certainly know that there are 'Murican politicians who would make a huge announcement if they would lift a finger to do a thing…
Well, there was some switch that made the access to the other repository work. But it requires us to use a special command, which in turn requires some additional steps to make the intended flow work as we want it to work.
// @variablepulserate @matigo
#bookclub Elly Griffiths, A Room Full of Bones (🇫🇮, Käärmeen kirous), ISBN 978-952-04-1218-0
@variablepulserate Indeed. I do hope it is just that, but I am not holding my breath either.
// @matigo
@matigo I do hope this issue can be resolved by toggling a switch on in the general Azure DevOps settings that has been set to off because of ”security reasons”. I do understand why such concerns exist, but there should be a way to set things differently for easier developer experience. Also, I am really annoyed by the fact that I always need to ask someone else to play with some project settings. That slows getting things done down significantly.
I spent a significant amount of time to hone a publishing pipeline only to find out that Azure DevOps has some stupid-ass limitations for accessing code repositories and pipeline artifacts from a different project in Azure Pipelines. Both of these should be possible, according to Microsoft’s documentation, but it just does not work…
#bookclub Elly Griffiths, The House at Sea’s End (🇫🇮, Jyrkänteen reunalla), ISBN 978-952-04-1122-0
@matigo I have been very strict with my watch notifications (and notifications on my phone in general): only those that I truly find necessary are allowed to come through, the others are not coming to my watch and on the phone only the badge is used.
I have the battery level on the complications I use, but I have recently experienced cases where the watch had switched itself off. Those might be related to the condition of the battery, who really knows.
@matigo Well, like said, I have had it for 5 years and have gotten stuff out of the watch that has been worth it.
@variablepulserate I was a no-watch person for ~15 years. I haven’t decided what I will do now yet. I like the Apple Watch for 2 major reasons:
1. I can get navigation on the watch, which notifies me when I am approaching some important point (such as an intersection) and tells me how to proceed from that point onward.2. The sports tracking for which I would need another sports watch that costs about the same.
Then there are other features that are nice and that I find useful. In other words, I either get a new Apple Watch or then I start living with my wrist free again.