Wherever is reading this, this article is worth looking at. Just trust me.
Wherever is reading this, this article is worth looking at. Just trust me.
I will always use the GUI for this when given the option. Change my mind (you can’t).
I agree on the merits, but the contrarian in me has to point out that any company is a monopoly through some convoluted interpretation. For example: Logitech has a monopoly on mice and keyboards that work with their proprietary software.
I don’t know 24, but 9 is:
scripting
Nice. I solved 22 (with 2 of them being unsure), there’s 12 I don’t know. I can only assume the multiple listings of ‘List files in current directory’ is a deliberate joke because you use it so much, but somehow it doesn’t feel right.
You should find a website to share it where people can play it interactively! I’m sure such websites are out there, it’s too obvious.
I take issue with “everything”, as most things are not. But it is a common trick when a developer wants to make a “new” file format that encapsulates a bunch of different files.
This reads like you work for Gamers Nexus and aren’t shy about it
… and is not a regex
Welp, Ars Technica has another theory:
Microsoft’s Azure status page outlines several fixes. The first and easiest is simply to try to reboot affected machines over and over, which gives affected machines multiple chances to try to grab CrowdStrike’s non-broken update before the bad driver can cause the BSOD. Microsoft says that some of its customers have had to reboot their systems as many as 15 times to pull down the update.
I am so confused. What’s supposed to happen on the 15th reboot?
site isn’t loading for me, but I’m guessing it’s one of those “combine two things to get a new thing” games like Doodle God, but with AI answering on the fly instead of it being handcrafted?
There might be some double counting, but it doesn’t matter - this just illustrates the insane scale of these companies.
Windows’ might be complex, but it is NOT graceful. If you have notepad open with unsaved text, then shutdown will never shut down - but nothing on the screen will make this obvious to a non-technical person.
and Windows 10 is obviously so outdated it’s not even worth including
Found this after a bit of clicking around: https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Wiki:Deletion_procedure
My suggestion: edit the page, explain at the top of the page (before the table of contents) how to get an up-to-date list using taginfo.
Other than that, maybe follow the deletion procedure anyway, at least to get an admin’s attention. This page really doesn’t make any sense if it needs to be updated manually (even if it’s with a script) when automatically updated info is available elsewhere.
Note, I have extremely little experience with the wiki, this is just my interpretation of the situation.
You mean the thing any credit card issuer does anyway?
Alright, good to know.
I am not an explosives expert, but I’ve seen enough YouTube videos about explosives to know that not all explosives explode in fire. Some are incredibly stable at extreme conditions right up until deliberately triggered. It all depends on the type of explosives.
There may still be ways to detect them, but it’s not necessarily going to be that simple.