Having a bunch of canals makes every trip longer. It was kinda annoying when I visited because a one mile trip was like 1.5 with all the crossings. Otherwise awesome city.
Marx: “Societies develop their economies in stages and industrialization is necessary to achieve socialism.”
China: Develops the economy through industrialization, which means a controlled capitalist economy run by socialists
Western Leftists: “ No not like that socialism is supposed to happen through some spontaneous magic!”
Isn’t there a campaign against food waste going on in China right now
China May Be Spying On You Through Your Coffee Maker
IDK, maybe the possibility of surveillance by anyone could’ve been avoided by not putting a general-purpose, wifi-enabled computer in everything?
Yes, you can outfit planes for more than one purpose and they were commonly used for troop transport.
It’s Crazy Train by Ozzy Osbourne I think
Lol I feel like Normandy would immediately disown two islands full of Brtsh people
It looks like you could pretty easily do this with some PVC/ plastic pipe but the thickness is too consistent to actually be metal IMO.
No man’s sky?
the weird furniture thing looks to be an oversized (overscaled?) film camera without an apeture. I can imagine they used the keyword “instagram” or “Film Grain” in their prompt.
EXPLAIN SETTING UP AUDIO SOFTWARE ON LINUX TO ME OR I’LL FUCKING KILL YOU! DON’T DUMB IT DOWN INTO SOME VAGUE SHIT! EXPLAIN JACK TO ME RIGHT NOW OR I’LL LITERALLY FUCKING KILL YOU! WHAT THE FUCK IS cannot use real-time scheduling (FIFO at priority -4)
? WHAT THE FUCK ARE JACKD and QJACKCTL? DON’T DUMB IT DOWN OR I’LL FUCKING KILL YOU
But seriously I’ve tried getting some music-making/software synths/recording/tracking software together and every time I just bounce off of it because setting it up is just too much effort/out of my regular software wheelhouse/the documentation is like 5 decade-old forum posts with 2 replys.
I’d say so - since you’re coming in relatively cold you’re probably not so used to Windows that you’d get frustrated with how Linux works compared to it, and if you’re just using it for regular, everyday stuff like web browsing there’s practically no difference.
If readers think this piece will now devolve into another Francis Fukuyama bashing exercise, they are absolute correct. We cannot let “The End of History” steal all the limelight. Francis Fukuyama has produced other stinkers as well and the long-forgotten “Trust” has aged just as poorly.
I’ve been running Linux in some form since 2012 - I installed Ubuntu 12 on my old laptop and played around with it - was a pain so I dropped it for Windows until like… 2015? Then I went full into it as I started getting into programming and whatnot.
TBF to the Dutch, the regular food they serve you at a restaurant nowadays beats the USA by a mile.
I had fried gator and it was actually a pretty nice meat all considered - it had that “freshwater fish” taste that I kinda dislike but otherwise it was sort of a softer-textured chicken.
What I really appreciate is that it’s geared toward handhelds, but has a decent desktop experience and is powerful enough to be a nice mobile media/piracy box with a remote and a USB-C breakout dongle. You don’t even need to change the read-only filesystem if you use WireGuard VPN (this might take some legwork to generate the .conf files you need, depends on VPN provider) and a streaming/torrenting program that comes in flatpak.
EDIT: Also forgot, you can add a custom shortcut to your Steam Library and have (some) programs launch from the SteamOS frontend rather than desktop.
Valve tried selling Linux boxes for gaming back in 2013, but noone wanted to sell/make/buy them b/c the library wasn’t there and it’s a hard sell when Windows is already baked into OEM hardware pricing anyways (so it wasn’t any cheaper to buy a pre-made Steam Machine than it was a similar-spec windows box).
I wouldn’t suppose that people are required to inform steam that they’re dead. Therefore, I’d assume the easiest way to bequeath games/DLCs, etc, is to get a wishlist from your loved ones, and then gift all of those games prior to death on a credit card that you might not be able to pay, due to being dead. Steam gets the money, the CC company gets shafted. Alternately, share your credit card details with a loved one and that list, and have them order within hours of your death (this depends on whether or not you were plausibly alive when those CC transactions took place)