Not enough miniguns yet.
Well there's a classic saying for this purpose: "Garbage in, garbage out".
No, it should obviously take you to "pay us enormous amount of money every month" page first.
Question is, what is its Wife Acceptance Factor (WAF)?
By breaking the play store version often. It was not possible for author to update it for several years. Seems it got better recently, but still, to have a full fledged version of Termux, you need to install it from a different source - f-droid, ideally.
So that's why google is killing termux.
Matt Mullenweg has not done anything explicitly evil, wrong, or super obviously illegal.
That's hell of a twist at the end. I would argue he did all of that and may be looking at jail time.
Peugeot 3008 is not that big... for a family of four.
They are already somewhat regulated: In europe, they are considered trucks, not personal cars, so you can't practically use them in the cities, park them on regular parking spots etc.
I have 291 RedBoxes in my yard.
Can I take those? ;)
Virtual environments are a great thing.
..also in the game!
Well this is how the app states it. It resolves to this: https://www.wolframalpha.com/input?i=0%3A00+GMT%2B8
Unfortunately not easy in my country - only for repeated warranty claims.
No, it's the same minute every day, for everyone in the world. 0:00 GMT+8
They have already practically ended it. The official process makes the user jump through so many hoops - registering account, using it for 30 days (!!!), installing their app, begging for unlock through it, getting random errors which the official support refuses to explain (!!!) and only after that having the chance to try to hit the daily unlock request window which lasts less than one minute each day (!!!) - that it is practically non existent. Fuck the fucking fuckers.
No no, Google does actually have its own custom proprietary AI hardware - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensor_processing_unit
Question: Looking for a gif/video - programmer's life played by handyman
update: this is the clip: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=AbSehcT19u0 Many thanks to @Krill.
Good day everyone! A long time ago, while working as a full-time programmer, I saw a short funny clip that I could totally identify with and that brilliantly described what daily frustrations programmes face in a way that non-programmers could understand. Description below. Thing is, I was unable to find it since and it frustrates me to no end and is hampering my ability to describe programming work to other people. Though I no longer program for a living, so I should not care. Anyway.
Video description (vague, from failing memory): A handyman reaches for his equipment but finds out it is not plugged in, so he reaches for the plug, only to find it broken. He proceeds to get the replacement / fix from the drawer but its handle breaks and stays in his hand. Bang, final title: the daily life of a programmer.
Or something like that. Please help.