Been using Linux as my primary OS for (counts on fingers)… decades now. Called them folders the whole time. Never had a problem with it. Nobody who matters cares.
Been using Linux as my primary OS for (counts on fingers)… decades now. Called them folders the whole time. Never had a problem with it. Nobody who matters cares.
Wait. Am I reading this right? Their punishment for doing something that they weren’t supposed to be doing is just to stop doing it?
I am legally obligated to respond to your post to recommend Linux.
Gosh, maybe the people designing the web UI for the cancellation process for their employer should make it clear exactly what the customer is cancelling so they’re not going to make that mistake.
And OP presumably read the article, knew there was no actual story, and posted it here anyway.
Don’t care. The only people that can get kicked off of shitter are people still on shitter propping up it’s waning credibility. There are no respectable people left on shitter because you can no longer simultaneously be there and be respectable.
Doesn’t poo go everywhere?
Not sure what you mean, but might be a misunderstanding. It’s not sucking water out of the bowl. It’s spraying a jet of fresh water. Some will even warm it up for you. 😁😌
Yes, I need to move around a bit to hit the mark, and generally ensure full coverage. Not sure how much I’m over doing it, but it works for me. Totally feel like I’m slumming any time I’m forced to use a toilet without one, now.
researchers designed a model that could generate 753 MWh of energy annually. That’s enough to power roughly 753 homes for about five weeks
Why can’t the writers of these articles make useful comparisons? Can they just not do basic math? Each tower can generate enough electricity for about 72 homes… period. Just say that. No apples and oranges required.
At this point (earlier, actually), anybody still using that platform is guilty of condoning his behavior. They should all be ashamed of themselves.
Why are you still on twatter?
This is what I was thinking at first. This just looks like classic chain letter.
But on rereading, it appears that the person at the top is controlling who’s sending books to who, and might even be dictating where you buy the book from, which is definitely a scam.
My guess on how this works. Upon DMing the person in control, you’re instructed to buy a book from a specific website (that they control) and have the book shipped directly from there to the “stranger.”. However, “stranger” doesn’t actually exist, no books are ever sent, and the person running this whole scam is just pocketing the money rubes spend on “books”.
Pro tip: Tar knows what to do if you try to untar a tar.gz file. It Just Works™.
My pihole prevents me from knowing what you’re talking about.
It selects people who don’t want to change a failing system because they are great at gaming that system.
Reminds me of the current American political system and the politicians it selects for us.
Enshitification
WTF are you talking about? All I’m saying is that if you write code (that in the context of this discussion passes arguments to a method you didn’t write, that may not be the type the author of the method expected someone to pass, but really, that’s completely beside the point), you should, oh, I don’t know, maybe test that it actually works, and maybe even (gasp) write some automated tests so that if anything changes that breaks the expected behavior, the team immediately knows about it and can make appropriate changes to fix it. You don’t need a strongly typed language to do any of that. You just need to do your job.
Theoretically, they’ll test and notice that doesn’t work and fix their code before they deploy it to production.
IANAL, but I feel like if the heirs to an estate cared enough about the deceased’s Steam account enough to get the court involved, Steam wouldn’t have a leg to stand on. But that’s probably what it would take to get them to do the right thing.