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Dance on my grave, why don’t you?
Dance on my grave, why don’t you?
Computers still look like that if you try hard enough.
If you put in a little extra unroll/reroll work, you can make it mysteriously change direction mid-roll and you’ll be long gone.
It’s understandable they’d want to see your technique.
Small typo on the link: [email protected]
I thought of this one too. “Photoelectric” smoke detectors are a thing, and it’s good to know if that’s the kind you have.
It’s the return of the return of Professor DeWitt!
I’ve found the look of the UI to be an acquired taste, and maybe easier to swallow if you’re used to using open source stuff. But I’d agree that the way it works is, in places, almost unforgivably unfriendly.
But it’s the “almost” that keeps me using it, because there’s nothing else that works across the platforms I care about, even if the application is so, so difficult to recommend or “deploy” to users.
KOReader! I maintain my library with Calibre and browse its OPDS server through KOReader.
It’s not, though. The person I replied to is saying that the lowest button of the cluster should be A, whereas the SNES standard puts B in that spot.
What makes BAXY the right way?
What am I missing here?
“L” “M” “M”
My understanding is that i7 is generally overkill in an X1 since the thinness makes the thermal properties worse, leading to more frequent CPU throttling and lower sustained power than i5. This could be wrong or outdated advice, though.
I found Waldo! No, no, my mistake…
Professor DeWitt, in Research Lab 2, with the beaker.
This article is from five years ago.
This is the way.