I mean, that’s fair.
I mean, that’s fair.
Runs Debian Bookworm
Hosting:
Probably some more stuff I’m forgetting. It’s basically my everything box.
Ok but playing a game through a mirror would be hard af
Adobe does anti-consumer shit. More at 11.
Good, we don’t have time for the demented.
This mf can’t even wear an apron correctly.
This argument is covered in the article.
I had the opposite problem. There would be 9 miles of that shit in a package and my item would still be broken in the bottom of the box. My cat loved it though.
I can usually set off on an incline with no rollback but I’ll be damn if it doesn’t slightly stress me out every time someone pulls that shit.
Especially annoying if you’re driving a manual and are stopped on an incline.
Meh, I just use Google Docs. Libre office is also usable in a pinch, but it’s a little… clunky.
After 30mins of inactivity my account locks and my screens blank. Few seconds after that my monitors go to standby. That’s it. I never shutdown unless something necessitates it and I only really reboot for updates if they require it. My PC basically stays on 24/7 and I’ve never had any issues. Current build has parts all the way back from 2015/2016 with no failures to speak of.
I think the point they’re getting at Is that you can’t use a self-hosted vpn to hide your piracy activity because the link is registered to yourself.
It actually is available on the website, but like most stores their mobile web experience isn’t great.
That actually made me laugh out loud. 😂
The Lowe’s app is actually really handy. You can look up any item and it will tell you the exact isle and bay it’s in for your store. No more wandering around or hunting for an employee to ask. It’s the only store app I actually keep on my phone.
What’s marked as “castle” probably became Lumbridge, if I had to guess.
Yeah, this seems like it would be a pretty shitty thing to do to people who are just trying to have some fun with costumes for Halloween.
Yeah, there wouldn’t be any options to swap left/right movement on a Gamecube. Back then you were lucky if a game had more than a handful of settings at all. It would be interesting to try on a system that allows it. I also wonder if you just practiced it enough if your brain would adjust. Sort of like that deal with the reversed controls on a bicycle that Tom Scott(?) did a video about a while back.