2:17:04prumnopytisInteresting but not exactly my area of hardware design. So there was a 2020 tech show debut of some scalable parallel processing-y machine (POWER10).
2:38:13sm2nprumnopytis, from what I recall, when I looked into it a while back, gpgme's cl bindings are unmaintained for a long time and have bitrotted
2:44:10prumnopytisI found that gentoo's package management has stuck to a somewhat ancient version of sbcl, but allegedly also has gpgme [and gpg-error] for cl for that. I wonder if that's why that's like that.
2:49:15sm2nyou may want to look at this: http://thetarpit.org/2018/cl-gpg
2:50:54prumnopytissm2n: I mean that's the fallback I was planning, but everywhere in gpgme's docs it said "no, don't do specifically that use gpgme" so I was wondering if I was just insufficiently powerful with asdf
2:52:46prumnopytisgpgme as a C library seems to be totally fine, so I was hoping to do something a little more formal than run-programming gpg. But for now I shall just do as you say
11:18:04schweersI have to admit that I only used drakma a little bit and tried out daxador even more briefly, so I can’t comment on how good these options are
13:49:11dlowebecause mitm is still harder than just capturing packets
13:50:14dloweif the client allows, you could also pin the cert so that the one site is guaranteed to use that one certificate, which will also thwart mitm attacks
13:58:46warweasleWell, I tried ##C++ but most of them never heard of Unification. Any idea if there is a unification library in C/C++?