If it was a Futurama setting, would he be Gender Bender?
If it was a Futurama setting, would he be Gender Bender?
The London Underground is actually kind of a dumb use-case because it’s fixed infrastructure.
On the other hand it’s a perfect test bed, because there’s sufficient changes of direction and speed, and the fixed infrastructure lets you measure drift. Plus it being underground helps simulate GPS signal being weak or unavailable.
Goes to show how low the bar is that the ADL failed to meet.
You mean lines that some wall street asshole does off a sheet.
I have xnayed 737-8 Max planes since the first set of crashes. It wasn’t just a single red flag, it was a whole parade. After this year, I think I’ll also add any Boeing plane manufactured in the past 10 years, which effectively limits the choice to older 777 and 737 models. But even then I’d rather fly Airbus or Embraer.
As a side note, the seats in older planes are much more comfortable too. Newer ones have hardly any padding.
CIV:BE sort of scratches the SMAC itch.
When I was younger and more naïve, I used to think a case was useless. I kept my phones in my pocket most of the time, and didn’t feel particularly clumsy or reckless. Then I got a phone that happened to have a glass back, and it broke not because I fumbled it, but because it slid out of my pocket onto time floor while I was sitting down. Glass backs on phones are bullshit.
So TCP ACK is the backwash?
You misspelled hamberders.
I’m out of the loop. How does Carmen Sandiego fit into the whole init system debacle?
You can, but you’ll need to increase the microwave’s power accordingly.
AKA you’ll be removed from the voter pool of you wear it.
Apart from the license incompatibility (which doesn’t stop it from being used by distros, as Ubuntu has shown): While it’s a fantastic filesystem for servers, it is also resource hungry and not suitable for small or portable systems.
rapid mitosis
As in you are seeing multiple boot entries? It’s likely one entry per kernel version that you have installed. It doesn’t happen often these days any more, but in some situations it’s handy to be able to revert to a previous kernel if for example third party modules break.
It has implications on the effectiveness of VPNs on public networks.
Not sure about erasing all of it, but it is (or was) certainly possible to delete enough of it to brick a motherboard https://www.phoronix.com/news/UEFI-rm-root-directory
A severe lack of imagination.
You misspelled “then”.