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I think you might be onto something there.
I think you might be onto something there.
Farming is god-awful if your livelihood depends on it. I’d rather be a carpenter or a metalworker once I’m fed up with that computer stuff.
Is that true, though? Your body needs energy for various tasks and those have different mechanisms of spending the energy. Muscles, for example, move, which creates heat. But that heat is not simply breathed out.
Our context is the tweet in the post and that mentions the difference between the Ottoman and Byzantine empires.
What is the difference?
I would absolutely love to have an EV. But they are very expensive, especially compared to the gas-powered car I already own.
Make Europe Great Again!
I don’t think that holds true in all scenarios. You need to use a key that has some guarantees. In many systems you will use data you don’t control, like email addresses, IBANs, ISBNs, passport IDs and many more. You have zero control over those keys, but because each comes with certain guarantees, they might be suitable as a foreign key in your context.
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Oh Foxy
Glover and Gibson are 77 and 68 respectively. I practically see the uninspired script.
There’s a .ooo domain? Wow.
A small robot apocalypse!
Generally, I don’t. But the hype around BG3 was so big and it looked so fun, that I thought I could see past the combat.
I think you’re talking about a relay attack and the Flipper Zero cannot do that.
I just started DA:I again and am indeed collecting shards in the Hinterlands. But it feels OK, so far. I have so many memories of that game, with the first playthrough clocking in at about 100 hours. I like being able to run around and discover stuff and with the influence score it feels like progress. But I’ll still give Veilguard a chance.
What, apart from opening some garage doors, can you do with these? I was looking into getting one but they seem extremely limited, especially for the price tag. If I remember correctly, there’s just an STM32 inside these things.
In this community? Definitely. People tend to downvote me when I voice this opinion. But it is what it is. I’ve hated turn-based games ever since I first tried some X-COM game on the Amiga. It’s just not something I enjoy.
But I wish I could enjoy BG3. Everything apart from the combat is so much fun that I really want to finish the game. But for me the combat is such a major drag that I don’t think I’ll ever play BG3 again.
The best Hello World I saw used a random library. Because there’s no true random without hardware, the author figured out the correct seed to write Hello World with “random” characters. I’ve used that to show junior devs that random in programming doesn’t mean truly random.