I mean, that is exactly what has happened…
Does that thing have a big turntable under there somewhere? Because from the photo, it looks like it can shoot in exactly or almost exactly the direction the rails happen to be pointing, and if you need to shoot somewhere more than two or three degrees to either side, you're SOL…
After googling around for a bit, and then switching to duckduckgo instead (Google becomes aggressively unhelpful as soon as you have words like "ejaculated" in your query. Duckduckgo does the same thing, just not quite so much.), it seems the book in question might be "The tenant of Wildfell Hall" by Emily Brontë.
Rimworld for me.
(I have never tried Dwarf Fortress.)
Honorable mention goes to War Thunder, while it isn't on of my favorites, I was still a bit blown away to find out it runs natively on Linux.
Generally yes, but what's shown here isn't, it only looks a bit like it if you ignore the clearly spelled out context.
The guy is literally called "Alki". In my language, that's a short form for calling someone an alcoholic…
Also, note that this saga has been going on for a while already. Here's an article from 2021 about this, also from the Daily Beast: https://www.thedailybeast.com/disgraced-billionaire-alki-david-says-he-faked-his-way-onto-the-rich-lists
It looks like it's taking the courts quite some time to demonstrate that their judgment has any teeth when going against rich folk.
I think those fairies are called "black market organ dealers".
Can't you just use just about any m.2 SSD with the 2230 form factor?
This is something that has been occasionally happening in Europe (at least in Germany, don't know about France) for well over 10 years now. Probably more like 15.
What's sorely needed at this point is much more storage to make this energy available when it is needed instead of when it isn't. Before that happens, you cannot really decommission any gas or coal power plants, because you still need them during times of much less renewable production.
That's weird, I could have sworn it was supposed to represent masturbation…
Going by what OP thinks "Chaotic Evil" means for sysadmins, they have clearly never heard of BOFH.
Writing good comments is an art form, and beginner programmers often struggle with it. They know comments mostly from their text books, where the comments explain what is happening to someone who doesn't yet know programming, and nobody has told them yet that that is not at all a useful commenting style outside of education. So that's how they use them. It usually ends up making the code harder to read, not easier.
Later on, programmers will need to learn a few rules about comments, like:
- Assume that whoever reads your code knows the programming language, the platform and the problem domain at least in general terms. You are not writing a teaching aid, you are writing presumably useful software.
- Don't comment the obvious. (Aside from documentation comments for function/method/class signatures)
- Don't comment what a line is doing. Instead, write your code, especially names for variables, constants, classes, functions, methods and so on, so that they produce talking code that needs no comments. Reserve the "what" style comments for where that just isn't possible.
- Do comment the why. Tell the reader about your intentions and about big-picture issues. If an if-statement is hard to parse, write a corresponding if clause in plain English on top of it.
- In some cases, comment the "why not", to keep maintenance programmers from falling in the same trap you already found.
I wonder when, if ever, Warner Bros. Is going to learn that players are actively pushing back against corporate greed and live service games are already way past the limit of microtransactions that players deem acceptable.
Some time after that actually happens.
Yes, there are a lot of players in various social networks loudly complaining about the phenomenon (although I suspect many of those are not even in the target audience to begin with), and there are even some actively boycotting these games, but so long as there are enough of them left willing to play ball, and especially some with an exploitable addiction-prone personality that can be hooked on loot boxes and microtransactions until they spend more than they have, there just isn't anything for these companies here to "learn". Other than "hey, this is insanely profitable".
They may get insulted on Xitter for it, but who cares, everybody gets insulted on Shitter…
Melania is a blatant gold digger. She might divorce him if he goes bankrupt, but only then.
![the background blur](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1095a35b-c902-4fd4-ba5c-f4072c077fe9.png?thumbnail=256&format=webp)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/1095a35b-c902-4fd4-ba5c-f4072c077fe9.png?thumbnail=1024&format=webp)
The photon UI under photon.lemmy.world does not work for me in Firefox 122 under Linux, showing nothing but blank page when I open it. It works in Chromium and in Firefox on Android.
When I open the developer console, I get the following error message:
Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: e.moderation is undefined
Crossgeposted von: https://lemmy.world/post/76993
> It is read-only, no new submissions allowed, but it is no longer private.
It is read-only, no new submissions allowed, but it is no longer private.
Is there any lemmy community for finding and discussing other communities, in the sense of "Hey, I am interested in this and that topic, which community should I join?"
I see kbin.social mentioned here and there where lemmy is discussed. How are those two related? Are they linked up, or are those completely separate communities?
It seems like what i2p is doing largely overlaps with what tor does. How do the two compare, and why would you use one over the other?
In some cases when I post a comment to a topic on a different instance, the comment will seemingly just disappear into thin air. Posting and commenting to the Lemmy Support community seems to work mostly fine, even though it is on lemmy.ml while my account is on lemmy.world. Any comments I tried to make on feddit.de just plain disappeared, though, no trace of them anywhere, not in my profile, not in the discussion thread, not even on the actual feddit.de instance.
Any idea what's going wrong here?
See title, is there any way to make lemmy not automatically blur the image thumbnails in posts marked as "NSFW"?