Yea I've always found that complaint odd. I just assumed everyone who makes it also has the activate windows watermark, and thus can't access the option.
Have they fixed the store version so it can do multiple monitors yet? Also local folder redirects?
Also remember to backup before things break. I once diligently backed up a system image before an upgrade. But I backed up a already failed SD card.
Honestly just having a laser/led printer removes so many of the problems with printers. All inkjets should be replaced.
That stopped working for home editions of windows. On pro you can say you are joining a local domain, but on home you have to use a workaround, such as the bypass command or a locked out account.
In terms of user content this would be correct. However when it comes to games on the platform valve does do curation to ensure games run etc. I don't know if it has been tested, but that curation could exclude them from the protection. If that was the case they could be directly sued for copyright infringement.
I did this years ago when it was added to home, not seen shorts since. Good guide.
Steam's Next fest has brought back some demos on PC. You might not get a demo for a big IP, but you can try lots of smaller dev games without having to buy first.
Don't get anoyed at gdpr for that. Websites could perfectly operate with those banners being non-intrusive, they choose not to.
I sometimes feel like I go all the way around. I find a fix for a problem that says: just copy and paste this. I then spend 3 hours or more reading and trying to understand the snippet, or do it directly. Then I realise the fix is to just copy and paste that original snippet.
I guess at least I now understand why everyone just does that for that problem.
I don't know, but it might be that Reddit is only limiting API keys for authenticated sessions. That way the anonymous requests still work up to the free API rate limits.