Re: raylib-d version 4.2.0 released!
On Sunday, 28 August 2022 at 15:25:11 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer wrote: I just released version 4.2.0 of the [raylib-d binding](https://code.dlang.org/packages/raylib-d). -Steve This is great! Thank you for supporting raylib-d. I guess it's time to update my projects that use raylib-d as well... :)
Re: Beta 2.100.2
On Thursday, 1 September 2022 at 04:34:40 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote: ... Anywhere in the ballpark of an $750 to $1300 annual fee. Can only give an estimate as on top of the eye-watering EV prices, there may be more equally high fees for attestation and cloud signing. To put that in context, the original certificate ordered in 2018 cost only $267 and was valid for **3 years**. That's a price inflation of over 150% year-on-year! ... Wow I didn't know it was so expensive. I mean it was somewhat reasonable back in the day ($267 for 36 months ~ $ 7.41 per month), now it can be around ~ $ 62 to $ 108, too much expensive. I'm foreigner and if in need I can throw in $ 30.00 per month, but I think this must be paid upfront for a year. But since you said nobody is complaining maybe just let it be. Thanks for the info, Matheus.
Re: Beta 2.100.2
On Thursday, 1 September 2022 at 04:34:40 UTC, Iain Buclaw wrote: No one has raised an issue so far for all DMD releases since that occurred in the last 12 months, so either lack of signing isn't an problem, or people are just ignoring/working around whatever warning messages you might get for running unsigned binaries (NB: haven't used Windows since 2003 so I have no clue what happens when you run an unsigned binary). When running an unsigned binary you get a warning at opening, that you can ignore. OV certificate are less expensive than EV certificates, for example you can get one at https://www.ksoftware.net/code-signing-certificates/ that last 3 years.
Re: D Language Foundation July 2022 Quarterly Meeting Summary
On Sunday, 28 August 2022 at 10:37:03 UTC, Mike Parker wrote: Since the meeting, Iain and I have set up a new server for the archived downloads. We've moved away from AWS and are now using Backblaze (with free bandwidth, thanks to the Bandwith Alliance and our use of Cloudflare). All 235.2 GB of DMD downloads have been moved. Iain can correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe this is active right now, so anything you download from downloads.dlang.org will come from there. As for the code-signing certificate, we're trying to decide on an option that's best for us. In the meantime, the last I heard, Martin Nowak was going to put out a release of 2.100.1 without signing the Windows executable. The new download archive on Backblaze is still on stand-by for now. After the 2.100.2 release proper has gone out, we'll make the switch. What is active right now on Backblaze is the revival of https://docarchives.dlang.io