Is that a weird lens, or is your photo stretched?
Is that a weird lens, or is your photo stretched?
I do, but mostly because I had them already on a different platform, and even then I’ll procrastinate a lot before doing it. Even when the process isn’t too complicated, you lose things like community controller layouts, which is frustrating.
Search it along with “potato” and you’ll find recipes
I have to admit that I would have never imagined it’s a different character than the semicolon if I hadn’t seen those. That’s bad optimization right there!
Interesting additional info: in Greek, the role of the semicolon is played by a floating period ·
Fun fact: In Greek the question mark is “;”.
Here’s one: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/08/230825122044.htm I don’t know about Tim Horton’s specifically, just saying that you might want to just forgo straws altogether.
If you do go this route, the best way is to make a fork of the main Umami github repository, then link that to railway. When you want to update, you can just sync new changes to the repo, and railway will rebuild your instance.
They replaced them with paper straws coated in PFAS, as far as I know.
I’m running Umami on Railway (so not self-hosted), for two small websites. Works pretty well. I think Railway changed their pricing, but I’ve been grandfathered in with a free plan.
Edit: all of my websites are also on Netlify.
You know you’re also a mammal with a bladder, right?
I dont want to see the words “low quality tooling” ever again.
To add to that, the charred bits make me think they didn’t preheat the oven.
Eh. I don’t live in the US.
Definitely recommend this. Since it’s direct downloads, you can also technically skip the VPN, so I just replaced the cost of a VPN with this.
You’ll probably need to do the whole sharing thing again on the Steam deck
You can play non-steam PC games on it. It’s just a little less straightforward. You don’t need to be connected to he Internet to play most games. Some might require you to be connected when you launch it (I think RDR2 did that), but then you can just keep it running and put the steam deck to sleep.
Is there a list of supported devices?
I’ve been to a recycling sorting facility (glass, paper, metal and plastic all go in the same bin here). The people working the conveyor belts had to practically wear hazmat suits, as whatever came in was vile. I rinse my containers extra clean since I saw that.
Looks like it’s a mastodon bot.
And here I was thinking you had a Steam Deck with a 4:3 screen.