Memory Alpha cites this as well as several other sources, showing the files were preserved and used at least in part in the documentary due to vigilant former effects workers.
Not quite. The base footage was all 35mm; they were just transferred to tape when doing the editing and VFX shots.
It is very much possible to remaster DS9 at the very least - they did a few select scenes for the documentary “What We Left Behind”, complete with re-rendered CG effects, as the assets still existed on VFX artist’s computers.
Actually, a lot of the CG seems to have survived and is in the hands of VFX artists; they actually remastered a few select scenes and showed them in the documentary “What We Left Behind” and re-rendered the ship battle from the original assets.
I know about "The Night Santa Went Crazy", but the mass shooting sort of violence in it is not so funny anymore; I much prefer "Christmas At Ground Zero". I'll have to look into the AC/DC one, though.
Some of my favorites from my playlist:
Jonathan Coulton and John Roderick's banger Christmas album One Christmas At a Time, of which my favorites are "Christmas In Jail", "One Christmas at a Time", and "Christmas with You Is the Best"
Also, Jonathan Coulton's "Chiron Beta Prime"
"Sad" and "CryptoSanta" by Lemon Demon
"Merry Christmas (I Don't Want to Fight)" by the Ramones
Most of the stuff on "They Might Be Giants in Holidayland" EP is good; most of it is from earlier albums, but it's a good collection of holiday stuff they've done. I'm just sad they've never released "We Just Go Nuts at Christmastime".1
Puddle's Pity Party version of "I'll Be Home For Christmas", because it sounds like someone is sneaking up behind you to murder you.
"Me and the Snowman" by Logan Whitehurst
1: There's also a song called "Christmas Cards" never released outside of a 7" from 1993. "Christmas In the Bighouse" is not on streaming because it's exclusive to the band's shop; I own it on CD and in FLAC, but can't put it on the playlist unfortunately because it's in Apple Music and collaborative playlists can't use personal library tracks.
Usually, you don't need to bother much with drivers at all outside of Nvidia GPUs and Broadcom modems since the kernel is monolithic and contains most drivers.
On an ATX motherboard, I think it's extremely rare for the ethernet chipset to require an out-of-kernel driver.
Honestly, even AMD to Intel would probably go mostly fine, considering the monolithic nature of the kernel and it having most drivers built in.
You'd probably want to make sure you have the Intel firmware package installed and make sure to remove configs specific to AMD stuff, like power management configs and kernel parameters, but it would still most likely boot.
Honestly, probably no. You're switching to something with the same CPU generation and micro architecture, and the boards are by the same manufacturer with the same mobo chipset generation (both 5xx). It should be plug and play.
The only major change I can see the old CPU has an iGPU, while the new one doesn't, meaning that you won't be able to use the video port built into your motherboard, only the ports on your GPU. I'm guessing you probably weren't using that HDMI port in the first place, so it's probably non-issue.
EDIT: There is a small chance you'll have to change your fstab depending on how it's configured; if it's done by drive UUID, it won't be a problem.
The My Chemical Romance cover of this song is quite good, perhaps better than the original.
I think my very long Christmas playlist with a mix of alternative and popular Christmas songs insulates me from hearing the original on repeat, and as a result, I don't have as bitter of feelings towards it. I mean, it's not my favorite, but I've heard much worse Christmas songs. It's a lowest-common-denominator corporate pop anthem, but at least a well-executed one; as long as it's not on repeat, I don't mind hearing it once in a while.
Personally, what I think would be awesome is a semi-anthology series inspired by LD's Wej Duj where each episode follows a different ship, and each episode builds to a final plot in which all the ships are involved.
Of course, we'd have the Klingon episode, but mainly, I just want an episode called "Cetacean Ops" that follows the crew of the USS George & Gracie, a Starfleet vessel staffed almost entirely by a plethora of aquatic life forms - I'm talking humpback whale captain next to Xindi Aquatic first officer-type things.
You might have a small crew of humanoids for maintenance and the occasional away mission or non-aquatic starbase, and you could explore an interesting story around how an aquatic crew tries to accommodate them.
PDF forms are often horrible when done wrong; however, PDF files are really good for when you really need a document to look the same everywhere and don't want to worry about what fonts the recipient has.
Funny post, but "his/her" makes me think, "What about non-binary Klingons?"
That poses the interesting question: what is it like to be non-binary, or queer in general, as a Klingon? Sounds like a whole c/Daystrom Institute post I need to make.
Also, DuoLingo has lost its honor in general with its AI obsession and heavy layoffs; only a petaQ would use such a coward’s website.
The only way a true warrior can learn Klingon is the old ways - the Okrand books and tapes!
EDIT: Klingon Wiki is also helpful, as is KlingonSKA for searching words and Hol ‘ampaS for font-related stuff and digital versions of out-of-print Okrand tapes.
According to this, they used “the original 3D scene files”
https://trekmovie.com/2017/03/01/ds9-clips-in-hd-cgi-re-rendering-next-on-wish-list-for-documentary-exclusive-details-video-sample/
Memory Alpha cites this as well as several other sources, showing the files were preserved and used at least in part in the documentary due to vigilant former effects workers.
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/CGI#Remastering_projects.27_ramifications