Yeah. Normal whoppers are crunchy. 1 in 4 whoppers is soggy and chewy and hard to eat
Yeah. Normal whoppers are crunchy. 1 in 4 whoppers is soggy and chewy and hard to eat
Whoppers are good but the risk of getting a bad one is not worth it. Ech
I’m stuck on the homological algebra exercise
Once every 50 years or so
If my cooking senses are right, it would be like cooking bacon in a stainless steel pan, which is sticky and burny but not impossible
Don’t think it saves bandwidth unless it’s a DNS level block, which IT should also do but separately from uBO
Eddie Bauer and Carhartt are my go-tos. Both carry tons of tall sizes. Wrangler has some too and may be cheaper.
Java is a fine choice. Much prefer it over pseudocode.
I have read programs a lot shorter than 500 lines which I don’t have the expertise to write.
I worked with Progress via an ERP that had been untouched and unsupported for almost 20 years. Damn easy to break stuff, more footguns than SQL somehow
This has nothing to do with Windows or Linux. Crowdstrike has in fact broken Linux installs in a fairly similar way before.
Sure, throw people in jail who haven’t committed a crime, that’ll fix all kinds of systemic issues
Catch and then what? Return to what?
Still not enough, or at least pi is not known to have this property. You need the number to be “normal” (or a slightly weaker property) which turns out to be hard to prove about most numbers.
It sounds like you don’t understand the complexity of the game. Despite being finite, the number of possible games is extremely large.
These things are specifically not defined by the protocol. They could be. They’re not, by design.
It doesn’t, it just delegates the responsibility to something else, namely xdg-desktop-portal and/or your compositor. The main issue with global hotkeys is that applications can’t usually set them, e.g. Discord push-to-talk, rather the compositor has to set them and the application needs to communicate with the compositor. This is fundamentally different from how it worked with X11 so naturally adoption is slow.
Bitcoin is more widely seen as a vehicle for speculation rather than a decentralized currency. Unlucky.
Okay, but this makes more sense as an instance method rather than a static one
Paru was at one point a rewrite of yay in Rust, and has since continued development as a pseudo parallel fork. It’s good. Dunno if it’s worth switching, you’d have to see if there’s any specific features you might happen to want, but they’re both fine