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14204799 (I think) 👋
I’ve forgotten my password and never linked an email to the account.
To this day I still wonder if they have the old chat history stored.
14204799 (I think) 👋
I’ve forgotten my password and never linked an email to the account.
To this day I still wonder if they have the old chat history stored.
Add a drop table statement to it while you’re at it
This caught me off guard. I’m lucky I wasn’t drinking anything.
Maybe this time I can get blur behind semi transparent windows to work 🤔
My path have been Slackware > Mint > Kubuntu > Arch > Kubuntu > Arch.
I forsee myself switching between a “care free” distro and Arch many times in the future.
You’re right. Apparently I wasn’t going off a good source.
I read somewhere that you can survive on salty water as long as you don’t leave it until you are severely dehydrated. You need to let your body adapt.
It was from research on how to survive lost at sea.
Not drinking water at all is a definite death sentence.
Edit: Looking a bit more into this, sea water will also kill you as it does dehydrate because your kidneys will try to deposit excess salt into your urin, but is unable to create urin that is saltier than sea water. You simply start peeing more than you drink.
The question is which option kills you faster?
I have been playing Subnautica exclusively for over a month now and I can’t stop. Halp!
Edit: I got to the ice worm part in Below Zero, and now I feel ready to quit.
My preferred solution is to only subscribe to one service at a time, and then switch, when I run out of things to watch.
This also means the providers get less money when they have less content.
3.something in the late 90’s for me. I remember thinking their version jump from 4.0 to 7.0 was the stupidest thing ever.
Slackware was my first distro I ever properly used.
The comment above claimed only people who never used PHP hate on it. The point was a counter claim to that.
It wasn’t a serious question 🙂
Sounds like you’re talking about good old vi or vim.
Is Ctrl + ⬅️ for typing ‘b’ then?
Good points. I didn’t realize even using a dedicated MCU just for that would be the better option.
If the device already has a microcontroller then I agree the “high tech” method is more appealing, while for something like a desk fan I think the analog route might be more elegant or at least more robust.
A photoresistor would be handy for adjusting indicator led brightness.
I was hoping that link would have been an example of what that would look like
https://devhumor.com/content/uploads/images/October2016/fibbonaci-indentation.jpg
Found it. It’s just obfuscated to make it harder to copy.
Isn’t this just normal Windows behaviour? I feel like I’ve been reading these kinds of posts forever.