@[email protected] draw for me C'mon. Theres a whole universe out there.
@[email protected] draw for me line art drawing A vibrant expanse of emerald grass stretches out, interspersed with the unexpected presence of a subway train gliding through it, its metallic form contrasting sharply against the natural backdrop, . professional, sleek, modern, minimalist, graphic, line art, vector graphics
@[email protected] draw for me line art drawing A vibrant expanse of emerald grass stretches out, interspersed with the unexpected presence of a subway train gliding through it, its metallic form contrasting sharply against the natural backdrop, . professional, sleek, modern, minimalist, graphic, line art, vector graphics
@[email protected] draw for me C'mon. Theres a whole universe out there.
It seems there's a 560 and 560S, and they look very different from each other.
Just to make sure, are you referring to the 560S, or the 560 in plural?
@[email protected] draw for me The Monobloc chair is a lightweight stackable polypropylene chair, usually white in colour, often described as the world's most common plastic chair. The name comes from mono- ("one") and bloc ("block"), meaning an object forged in a single piece.
From Wikipedia | Monobloc (chair):
The Monobloc chair is a lightweight stackable polypropylene chair, usually white in colour, often described as the world's most common plastic chair.[1] The name comes from mono- ("one") and bloc ("block"), meaning an object forged in a single piece.
Your link didn't work for me, until I removed /en/ from it: new link
"spots" (are they like pits?)
Yeah, the petabit is made of lots and lots of tiny betapits /s
Or you could encode the hexdump to audio and press it into vinyl. But in this case, as well as the QR, i think, you'll have to keep some physical backup (that isn't encoded) of the decoding algorithms for QR or the audio, otherwise you just have some funky pixelart/bleepbloop sounds to enjoy but no data - if every other copy is gone... Well, you could spend the rest of your life trying to calculate it then?!
For good measure, let's also mention Kodi's support for 3rd-party add-ons, such as various legitimate (e.g. national broadcasters) VoD services, pirate streams scrapers, live TV (e.g. IPTV or TVHeadend), as well as e.g. Jellyfin/Jellycon. And that's not even all!
Insert the end of a cutlery knife between the rim of the glass jar and lid from below. Give it a tiny wiggle, and the jar will pop open. At least if it's stuck because of a vacuum.
If that didn't work, poke a tiny hole in the lid with a sharp object to break the vacuum, but please be careful if using a kitchen knife for this! A nail or a screw is probably a safer choice.
Cool. I like the idea!
Though I don't drive, I adore the general usefulness of the OSM project, and would find that sort of stuff very useful if I had an ICE car.
I measure only for fun. That doesn't suck.
The page you're linking to is a good read. I had heard about a handful of the problems through the years, but having them presented and precisely explained like this was great, I think.
I switched to Jellycon that doesn't integrate with the Kodi library, but rather acts like other basic Kodi add-ons. You can still browse the Jellyfin library through the add-on in Kodi, and through the Kore app by navigating to add-ons > Jellycon > Content tab, though I mostly initiate media playback from the Jellyfin app on Android. Direct play works too.
I guess it would work on desktop too, but in an Android emulator.