That’s way too broad. Scripting is a pretty broad concept.
That’s way too broad. Scripting is a pretty broad concept.
It’s got RGB. Man, it must do so much FPS (fabric per second).
The return of mustaches.
Thanks! Hopefully my new tires are more resilient
Leftover powder on the road is a different beast. It’s often mixed up with a little bit of sand, and it’s been crushed into a powder that doesn’t feel like natural snow at all. It doesn’t stick and it slips like fine sand. Not a fun time. A little pile of 2-3 cm of the stuff was enough to almost make me completely lose control last year. Scary stuff.
People have tried to get me into Monster Hunter several times, with little success. There’s just a lot of work involved.
Lots of crafting and farming, and once you’re ready, the fight itself is a lot of work. It takes a long time due to large HP pools.
There are a zillion builds, and the story isn’t exactly deep enough to engage me despite the shortcomings. To me, it’s basically Elden Ring, but with the aspects I don’t like turned to 11.
Hmm, i see.
I’ll have a new bike with different winter tires this year but last year my bike would get dangerously destabilized by the smallest amount of leftover powder snow trail from the snow clearing machines, so I stayed well away from uncleared roads.
But for one, as you say, that was forgetting about how uncleared snow is not the same, and also, new tires this year.
I’ll give it a try next time. It’ll probably be safer to avoid the cars for a little bit longer anyway.
I live in the city though. It could easily recommend I use the street if it knew that winter is a thing. And uh… Idk, maybe cycling through deep snow works on a fat bike, but with a normal bike with winter tires like mine, I can’t just blast through 30+ cm of uncleared snow.
Often Google tries to have me cycle on a trail that has zero snow removal in the winter. So there’s that.
I’d have expected ad providers to catch on pretty quickly that there’s cheating involved, no?
I think that’s right for a website where you accidentally clicked an ad and now it’s trying to convince you you have a virus and you need to download their virus to remove it. Or maybe for an ad pop-up where annoying you might increase the chances that the content makes it into your brain.
But for a news website i have trouble seeing the logic.
I disagree. Joules are really hard to understand to laypeople. Watt-hours directly relate to the power of a device without conversion, and can even be really translated in terms of power bill.
3.6 megajoules? Eh, I guess that’s maybe a lot? Or not?
1000 watt-hours? Oh, like running a microwave for a whole hour? Dang that’s a LOT!
I’ve always wondered. Is there really a benefit to a ton of redirects like that? Like, do they gain anything by making it harder to back out?
Or is it just extremely incompetent website programming?
URLs aren’t case-sensitive though, so wouldn’t those necessarily have another kind of differentiator?
We regularly have that problem at work. Works on your development PC on Windows. Push to pipeline, get cryptic error messages. Once we were two people trying to figure it out for half an hour.
Case-sensitive file names. Why.
Oh spam email I absolutely get a lot of. But spam calls, thankfully, are a relatively rare occurrence.
Holy shit, I thought people were exaggerating when they said spam calls had gotten out of hand. I didn’t think it was that bad.
No, you misunderstand. It’s not expert sex change
It’s experts ex-chang’e. It’s a site for Chinese space program retirees.
Maybe do robotics (likely in a simplified way; surely “robots for dummies” is a thing?) and have them make their robots compete in some sort of competition at the end of the year.
I’m not even a competitive person at all, but when our school had us compete on Popsicle stick bridges, I had a ton of fun. Creative projects with a clear, real-world benchmark at the end are really fun.