Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.
Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.
Sadly Microsoft didn’t specify where on the keyboard the key has to be.
In order to find out, hit the keyboard with your head; wherever your forehead touches the keyboard first is where the key is supposed to be.
Yeah, I deserve that. I’m just gonna leave my typo. Thanks for the laugh!
1024 = 210
FYFY
I alternate
I have a dad joke, but it’s yo momma.
Apparently this is what makes someone turn neutral.
Hey, at least the number of fingers on the visible hand check out.
Seeing as they melt the stuff, I’m not sure the grains need to be rounded.
The problem for chipmakers is not the sourcing of materials itself, but the purity of the sourced material. So don’t worry about public beaches disappearing into Intel’s hopper-feeder.
I have one (came with my display) and it works really well. Plus it’s safe for their nanotextured displays (which are sensitive to having their nanotexturing worn off by cloth that’s even mildly abrasive).
!tallyho@infosec.pub for those who would like to remain in their own instance.
Are fans of the other three-letter-company-made buckling spring keyboard (the model F) also welcome?
Yes: it prevents things like death threats mods have been known to receive on the centralised Lemmy precursor.
Their blog would work so much better if PINE64 stopped bundling their updates in one big wall-of-text post and would simply publish them as they came in (or were finished, in the case of a more in-depth article).
With instances already disappearing (eg. vlemmy), content is being lost. Are you considering a lemmy archive?
Having multiple sufficiently-powered virtual machines makes OS development really low friction. Though I’d personally go for a blade subrack instead.