They absolutely have pixels. They aren’t directly addressable but they exist.
They absolutely have pixels. They aren’t directly addressable but they exist.
Depends. Do you have more money than Disney? If so, the odds are in your favor.
I’m fairly certain that the last two books will be published
Hahahahahaha…
*gasp*
Hahahahahahahahaha
It’s kind of neutral in my opinion.
It would have been better if it varied more from the radio show as the books did, and the special effects were largely cringeworthy if a product of the time and budget. The animations were very good though.
My point was that it doesn’t particularly support the idea that all the different versions have been drastically different.
But the miniseries is just a carbon-copy of the radio programme…
Vegetables are “parts of plants that are consumed by humans or other animals as food.”
Sweet potatoes are both tubers and vegetables.
I have little trouble myself but I have an “advantage”:
(Open)PGP is the protocol, GPG is just one application that implements it.
I wasn’t sure id it was that or if the joke was that one of these frames was an AI-generated clone of the original meme.
The second normally brings it to a vote. So … all those in favor?
… Aye.
Because the instructions, “draw a brick here, a pipe there, here are the rules for how jumping works, etc.” are smaller than “these pixels are blue, that one is orange, that one is white, etc.”
Yeah, 486 DX4/100 was the peak of DOS gaming.
It means that everything will be in equilibrium, and there will be no such thing as hot or cold. No energy to move from place to place to create the idea of hot or cold.
So I guess that means that it’d be cold but the concept would be meaningless.
I think programdata is closer to /usr/lib or maybe /var/lib.
You almost never see config files in programdata.
Sadly not for UNC paths. Those open as if it’s a webpage.
It is interesting but people have different thresholds for what they consider “ads”
I know Ubuntu took some flak for offering their system — was it Ubuntu Pro? — at their login screen. That’s fine with me, but bothers others.
Ubuntu again did it with some music store app in their app search results.
Meanwhile Windows has stuffed Candy Crush, Office, and many others in the start menu over the years. And sometimes it’s not Microsoft but OEMs doing this.
But is crapware “advertising”? Im not sure but it seems like perceptions have shifted at the same time as Microsoft specifically has pushed more and more intrusive ads, and those have moved further to the “advertising” side of that line between suggestion and spam.