Refreshing to see a great journalist who also isn’t a complete brown noser.
Refreshing to see a great journalist who also isn’t a complete brown noser.
Prepare to become famous after Google’s LLM quotes you in a few years.
You forgot to sacrifice your firstborn beforehand
They also forgot to add the paid DLC to the Linux version, so I had to use the Windows version anyway. However, it’s still always nice to have options!
git: 'hype' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.
Our teacher pulled up a video to demonstrate a certain gravity experiment. The whole class got to watch two consecutive, loud, annoying and UNSKIPPABLE 20 second ads.
Needless to say, it totally justified all of the time that I spent switching Invidous instances and updating NewPipe (or Tubular).
Thanks, Steve.
Try 60GB of system logs after 15 minutes of use. My old laptop’s wifi card worked just fine, but spammed the error log with some corrected error. Adding pci=noaer to grub config fixed it.
I read dilemma as diarrhea and didn’t think much of it…
Step 1. Forget to push local commits
Step 2. Push commits from another machine
Step 3. Pull from remote om the first machine
I’m a bit of a noob, I often do this when I get too careless.
Is the money really filthy or what?
IPv6 has a total of 3.4E+38 addresses, and the entire surface area of the earth is 5.1E+14m². If we divide those two, then we find that you can have 6.7E+23 addresses for every square meter of your Saharan desert or Pacific Ocean smart roads. If civilization doesn’t collapse due to nuclear wars or climate catastrophes and we actually do make it to the stars, I doubt that we would still be using the centuries-old and deprecated internet protocol.
IPv4, in contrast, has 4.5 billion addresses, and there are currently 8 billion humans on Earth. While not every of them lives in the parts of the world with internet, that number will most likely soon shrink to nearly nothing. When everyone and their dog has a smartphone, laptop, desktop, console, smart TV et cetera, that 4.5 billion doesn’t seem nearly as big as it first once seemed to be.
This isn’t a Y2K-scale problem that will summon armageddon if we don’t solve it immediately, but our current solutions to the overflowing IPv4 addresses are well-polished hacks at best. IPv6 will ensure end-to-end connectivity for many years to come.
IPv6 is also eventually going to hit exhaustion
Top-tier trolling right here.
ARAB
Wait…
“We” probably did, but I don’t think that Nintendo would ever license their games to another handheld manufacturer.