

Steam might be able to fix those. But I don’t know if that would work with varnish on the wood.
Steam might be able to fix those. But I don’t know if that would work with varnish on the wood.
Zangendeutsch leckt oder Autokorrektur?
No idea of biotech but I have seen Thought Emporium and “Gatorade” is accurate.
I’m not from the US, but isn’t the smallest coin a 1-cent coin?
The numbers are totally off though.
A current-gen iPhone SoC (or CPU, the sources are not very clear), nhas about 19 billion transistors. That does not include transistors from flash memory. Following the numbers it does also not include RAM.
IPhone transistor count becomes completely irrelevant when you start looking at flash chips. Even a 16GB flash drive can contain 64 billion transistors.
Comparing source code sizes is completely meaningless. Rust projects are usually smaller with far more granular dependencies.
It working again after cooling down is an indication for heat creep IMHO. The filament is getting too hot up to where the gears are, causing them to slip and not feed filament.
If we are being fair, they are still reasonably fair to users. Open source gaming is not a reality.
They don’t force you to use Steam, but still work on Proton as Open Source. They don’t lock down their hardware.
What I’m trying to say is, while Valve is not perfect, it’s much better than any big tech alternative.
Apparently “STINKY” is the default StarLink SSID (Another Musk joke), so yeah…
That’s not been true for a long time.
Especially for a private home server, SSDs run quieter, cooler, and are more compact.
Still more expensive than spinning rust though.
No do the rest.
ich_iel leckt
Go into settings, system, backup. GrapheneOS has a built-in backup provider that can use USB drives.
This uses the same mechanism as a Google Backup, just without Google servers.
Here’s a list of phones I used; Anyway, go buy the new Pixel 9.
Apple already lost in the EU and need to allow other app stores
What do you mean? rustfmt is the de facto standard and is easily run using cargo fmt
. Most projects use it along with clippy, the standard linter.
Recently tried biome for a web project. It’s a combined linter and formatter, and it’s so good. Compatible with prettier too.
It was not randomly decided. Even before arrays as a language concept existed, you would just store objects in continuous memory.
To access you would do $addr+0, $addr+1 etc. The index had to be zero-based or you would simply waste the first address.
Then in languages like C that just got a little bit of syntactic sugar where the ‘[]’ operator is a shorthand for that offset. An array is still just a memory address (i.e. a pointer).