

Yes, but more importantly they move the air around you. The air won’t be cooler, but will feel cooler.


Yes, but more importantly they move the air around you. The air won’t be cooler, but will feel cooler.


All of the MS Office files with an “x” in the extension.
.docx, .pptx, …


And Dell, HP, System76, and Framework with Linux.
Even that may be too much. If my limited feed is full of memes, I’ll unsubscribe.


Welcome to Gentoo.
Notes with recommended user actions are provided per package after every update. Mostly to let you know about optional packages and tell you how to enable optional auto start for some things.
For things that need even more attention, there is a system that tracks read/unread news that also only show up when your system needs it.


I’m no artist. If I ever had the inspiration to make a song it would have to be AI generated. I’m sure I’m not the only one. Of course that would be a one off with a small audience.


XSLT can be run on the web server. The browser just receives the output HTML.


According to this post, they are not introducing ID verification. They are adding one more optional field to the existing list of optional fields for storing data about the user.
https://programming.dev/post/47380789/22787208
Edit: add “optional”


As someone who occasionally goes to markets and pays someone using Square, I think I’m happy with that.
Now that you mention it I’m surprised single purpose phone isn’t required like needing dedicated Internet for registers. Or did they finally fix that to allow VLANs?
Thank you. I hadn’t considered the binary dependencies in a rolling release.
True, but also why is that a rule from upstream?
Partial updates are explicitly not supported.
This is what I’m referring to. Pacman is the only package manager I’ve used with this limitation.
The dependency issues seem like that are a flaw in the Arch design. It is the only package manager I’ve seen that requires running the latest available version of packages.


I’ll be annoyed if I have to unmask QtWebEngine. I don’t think building firefox is too bad.


But more expensive than the wage of the person to go around replacing them for weekly sales? Walking back and forth to make a new tag to fill in an empty spot when something runs out?


I’ve been pretty happy with Tangle.
I tried ground news and wasn’t impressed.


Agreed. They seem to have misspelled Microsoft Trackball
The machine can print a human and machine readable copy. Then feed that into another machine after verifying and you have two independent digital counts that can verify each other. You also have the paper that can be manually counted if you need to be extra sure.
This is what we had for a few years. Now the first step is replaced by manual bubbling. Still have the scan for the instant digital count though.