Aluminum is the fifth most common element on Earth, and is naturally present in pretty large quantities in soil.
Are you sure you aren’t confusing it with lead?
Aluminum is the fifth most common element on Earth, and is naturally present in pretty large quantities in soil.
Are you sure you aren’t confusing it with lead?
Then, you could take those comments, and have the compiler use them to ensure you’re using the right variable in the right place. Oh wait, we just invented a type system.
Ah yes, I’ll just replace all my power sockets, get rid of all my electronics, and only buy imported European electronics from now on.
It’s so obvious, why didn’t I think of it before.
Oh yeah, and rewire my whole house to 240 V. Easy peasy.
I’m waiting for Outlook (Taylor’s Version).
I assume you meant trillion and not million for those gdp figures? Even then, they’re low.
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Why isn’t there a way for Linux users to automatically install every missing dependency for a program?
There is; actually there are several. Every^* distribution has a package manager, that’s what it does. But you have to make a package for the program, similar to what the tegaki folks have done for Mac and Windows.
Another option is to statically link everything.
One issue is the fragmentation; because there are so many Linux distributions, it’s hard to support packages for all of them. This is one thing that flatpack aims to solve.
I would expect this to be an issue for old closed-source software, but not for old free software. Usually there’s someone to maintain packages for it.
Some cursory searching shows no tegaki package on flathub or in nix (either of these can be used on any distro; the nix one is surprising to me; it hosts soooo many packages).
But I do see it in Debian: https://packages.debian.org/search?suite=default§ion=all&arch=any&searchon=names&keywords=tegaki
It’s still wild to me that I visited Hawaii as a kid, and then several years later. When I went back, a road I had driven on as kid was covered in lava.
What? The people who made him buy it got paid already. I’m sure they’re laughing every time they see it drop in value.
The electricity from the fans also ends up as heat.
Python with numpy/matplotlib/scipy.
It’s really not at these scales. Earth and Mars go from roughly 4 light minutes apart to over 20.
At the best case, saying something and then waiting 8 minutes for a response is hardly what I’d call “real time”.
I’m not so sure. The study discusses specifically people who engage in partisan subreddits, which is not the same as being politically engaged. It also uses an AI to grade toxicity, which surely mischaracterizes many interactions.
For example, I have been in communities of a non-political nature, where political discussions occur. These are often about real issues that affect real people in the community, and yet there are people complaining about political content.
To complain about political content is, at best, a very privileged take, demonstrating that you are in a position where politics do not affect you much. At worst, it is actively hostile behavior with the goal of continuing the status quo and shutting down discourse. I would call most of these kinds of comments “toxic”, and yet the rhetoric is usually fine, so I doubt an AI would agree.
Linux gaming is already here.
But then you need the giant engine in the RV. Just get an RV that you can drive, and tow a small car instead?
There are multiple kinds of heat pump water heaters.
For the one I have, only the tank is inside. The full heat pump is outside, and water is piped between it and the tank.
Isn’t that what Unreal Engine has?
I’ve also heard it referred to as “source available”.
I just learned that the Mac version of sed requires a backup file for the -i
flag, making it really hard to write cross-platform scripts that use it.
Is that really any different from life insurance, except with more potential to help poor people?
That’s just to use the online editor. It’s open source, and there’s a CLI you can run locally.
https://github.com/typst/typst