He’s downloading cracks or cracked executables
The cracking groups aren’t exactly signing their work with a verifiable public key
He’s downloading cracks or cracked executables
The cracking groups aren’t exactly signing their work with a verifiable public key
They just said they were downloading arbitrary binaries to execute
At least in some jurisdictions if it’s collected as a tip it has to be passed to the employees
I am Jack’s complete lack of surprise.
'The wind keeps blowing my wifi signal away ’ is more than enough information to diagnose the problem, and ‘the computer forgot my password’ is now a real thing since password managers started coming baked into browsers.
We are so far beyond parody of ourselves that i have no idea how the onion stays in business.
Questioncore, lemmypunk
Since some wsl features started coming with windows out of the box python has been pretty trivial to install. It’s a far cry from the conda/cygwin nightmare hell scape it used to be
Technically yes, but the thermal load of putting all those computers inside the other computers is generally prohibitive, and image quality once you get 3 monitors deep in the tool chain is poor enough you have to start making the text bigger.
It makes me wonder how many other people back out after hearing that the job is on-site. And it makes me wonder why this wasn’t specified in the job description
They’re trying not to get filtered by having it listed as on site up front, and banking on people saying “well, I’m already foot in the door i guess i could settle” once the interview process starts.
A lot of risk narcing on someone irl
The frustrating part is that the whole idea is great on its face: pay to capture the co2 you generate where they can do so at scale, but this just… clearly doesn’t do that.
No, but given the context when it was originally written, one would have a hard time finding any which weren’t. Especially if when you answer ‘yes’ it just asks you to list them, as there’s a big difference from the US’s perspective between having been part of a coop in the woods and a member of the Soviet Politburo
Bricks don’t need sponsors
What I was referring to was the BPA lining traditionally found in cans: https://www.beeradvocate.com/articles/15869/bisphenol-pale-ale-should-you-be-worried-about-the-bpa-in-your-beer-can/
Looking it up now, it looks like there are multiple alternative linings which are being phased in and/or proposed, but every can still has some sort of lining, whether an epoxy or other similar material to protect the contents of the can from the aluminum or vice versa.
EDIT: whether or not this lining outweighs the additional transport and processing costs of glass (remelting/shaping glass is much more energy intensive than aluminum reporcessing as I understand it) was the question I was proposing and one I don’t have an answer for.
I was under the impression that the glass was actually better, since the cans require a plastic lining to not ruin the beer and the bottles can either be recycled and reused as-is after a wash or ground up and remelted with little/no loss in quality.
It’s just so sad that the US healthcare system is the thing that’s holding back business. Seems counterintuitive.
It’s holding back your business. The wealthy do not have this problem.
This is working as designed.
Does Montreal also have zero publically accessible trashcans for miles at a time? Because everywhere I’ve personally seen this be a problem, there are zero trash cans anywhere.
For what it’s worth, I’ve had issues with many different games crashing when running my 14th gen i9 at factory clock rates, and all of them manifested as video driver/shader faults during the crash or blue screen. Running it at 90% of rated speed, all those mysterious GPU issues went away.