It’s apparently illegal to have a beer with someone that’s not a complete imbecile in the US.
Probably one of those old laws that never got repelled.
It’s apparently illegal to have a beer with someone that’s not a complete imbecile in the US.
Probably one of those old laws that never got repelled.
I like your optimism. Even though I’m far from sharing it.
They want to open a food truck from what I heard.
Reading the logs for the incoming connection attempts of a fresh machine should be mandatory for everybody that wants to get a box online. It’s enlightening.
And it already was scary twenty years ago.
A few of them did. The problem is also implementation in the games.
In the past few months, I’ve been able to play more multiplayer games in Linux than before (notably Insurgency and Squad now work).
I tend to mostly play single player, but all in all, I don’t even remember when I last booted my Windows partition. If it wasn’t for a last glimmer of hope of reviving my Oculus CV1, I’d probably wipe it.
True, that’s what the manual reading is for.
Don’t ask a question, post a wrong answer to the question you have.
That’ll give you many answers.
Of course you can always start by RTFM you lazy sod.
Good old Transport Smeagol Administration.
Nothing special. It’s a regular day in my not-US country.
So why is Matrix allowed to survive when XMPP (the original protocol that made messaging apps interoperable) was killed when it started to thrive?
Off to the Special Military Operation Crimes Tribunal with you!
Google fairly successfully managed to kill that. It’s gone from Internet standard to a niche thing with everyone doing their own thing now.
Same, I switched to Linux from Windows 3.11. It’s hard going back whenever I find myself on something else. I even bought a Mac once. That didn’t last long.
As a test machine, yes. As a production machine… Meh.
Little memory, slow and small disk…
This brings back fond memories.