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@zerocipherz
Making pvp gaming fun again. 🇨🇦 🇵🇹


Iran has a right to exist. Also, they warned they would strike which I have been reliably informed makes them the most moral army in the world. Lastly, the children harmed were used as human shields. Did I miss anything?




My feedback so far: Local development UI (à la Firebase Emulator): A local dashboard for wrangler dev would be a big quality-of-life improvement. Being able to inspect R2 bucket contents, browse Workflow run history and state, and visualize the bindings topology (which Workers connect to which services) would dramatically cut down on "why isn't this working locally" debugging. Firebase Emulator has set the bar high here, something similar for miniflare would be excellent. Presigned R2 URLs don't work locally: When running wrangler dev, there's no way to generate a working presigned URL for a local R2 object. createPresignedUrl produces a signed "r2cloudflarestoragecom" URL, which has no local equivalent — so the URL is structurally valid but unreachable. This forces a dev-only code path where the Worker proxies R2 bytes directly instead of handing off a URL to the client. Ideally, Miniflare would either intercept presigned URL requests and route them to the local bucket, or expose a local S3-compatible endpoint that the signing logic can target. Bonus: wrangler r2 object put --local writes to a different namespace than the BUCKET binding. please @CloudflareDev cc: @threepointone Thank you 🙏






Y Combinator has the money, the staff, and the reach to actually check what their portfolio companies are doing. They have no excuse for missing something this obvious. When they throw money at startups like Delve and call it innovation, they ignore the most basic due diligence that any responsible investor should do. The system rewards founders for hype and growth, not for building real products. @garrytan and his band of crooks at Y-Combinator failed their own investors by looking the other way because bragging about the next big thing mattered more than verifying anything was real. The companies that used Delve aren’t blameless either. They understood what compliance means. They knew what it would take to pass those checks if they were honest about their own systems. Instead, they signed off on fake reports and looked the other way to keep fundraising and shipping. It’s negligent and it puts real people at risk. The victims, as always, are the investors who believed the story and the customers whose data ended up exposed. The people at the top move on to the next pitch and prance around podcasts wearing lobster costumes. The people at the bottom pay for it.





Americans haven’t forgotten how, even as hundreds of U.S. soldiers were dying in Vietnam, and the outcome was already clear, General William Westmoreland was flown home to reassure everyone that the war was going well — that the U.S. was “winning.”






