There is nothing in /dev/null, and no man needs nothing.
There is nothing in /dev/null, and no man needs nothing.
Get that picture away from me. I quit that game for my family and my health. I can’t let myself go back… Not even once…
Are you, ya know… into making games?
I initially read that as “It’s better than dome.” Which is an objectively solid pitch for anything.
Addressing your concerns in order: You should be. You will. It’s not up to you.
Sell me on Helix real quick. I’ve heard about it and it looks interesting but I’m not sure what the hook is.
Any of you Keebs know what that exact set is in the pic? I like it. Are they shine through? Looking to upgrade my moonlander.
I forgot about Digg. Whatever happened to it?
Does this allow for easy upgrades and/or are there any issues with local storage? I used to run it about an age and a half ago, but I’ve recently wanted to spin an instance back up for a few reasons. These things change so fast, I looked away and now I’m out of the loop.
Best I can do is half Federation… 2/3 if you pay in cash.
My inner computer scientist likes this framing, and understands its logic. My inner, and much less influential human being, hates it a lot AF.
No stupid questions here. Only the occasional stupid answer.
It means they put a new sticker over the old one, and they don’t rattle when you shake them.
Once all the boomers die, y’all can hang out topless wherever you want. Everybody else is cool with it.
…just the weirdest boner right now…
I don’t think so Tim! Just stick it all in one repo/compose file and smash the ‘go’ button. Are you paying by the directory or something?
SOURCE!
Edit: I guess I should clarify. I’m saying that this is the ultimate source as an answer to this question. I’m not ordering this person to cite a source. Sorry for the interruption.
Not if you had Napster and your parents didn’t realize that you can just turn the monitor off without turning the whole computer off all night.
That hack Torvalds keeps denying my pull request to implement /dev/aether which would immediately begin overwriting the entire disk and all other mounted storage with the repeating content of whatever is moved there.