Wherever is reading this, this article is worth looking at. Just trust me.
How would that be better than a soft-button or gesture that’s always available? (I use gestures, and it’s always possible to swipe from the side to go Back)
they already have that (the Back button), guess how effective it is
I guess iphones don’t have it but nobody uses those anyway :P
That’s for low magnification professional microscopes, like that thing jewelers use (apparently called a loupe)
Edit: damn, loupes are typically 10x so they would literally be deciscopes.
I would say instead: we unlocked a new research tree. We still need to research it, and once it’s done, new gear will be available to buy.
Deciscope for the awful toy ones that don’t really work
You can use something like SimpleLogin to create email aliases that can’t be traced back to your real email address.
Edit: other options are available, such as Firefox Relay which does exactly the same thing.
Haven’t tried, I’ll take your word for it.
I like that Mint even has GUI for adding and managing apt sources and signing keys. Something that probably doesn’t get used much because whenever you need to do it, there’s only instructions for doing it by commandline.
I’ve heard someone say that they usually do this, first the standalone release then later on (days or weeks) they make the upgrade path.
If I remember correctly, the previous upgrade just showed up in the Update Manager one day. Personally I’m happy to wait a few more days to get a no-thinking-reauired upgrade.
I take issue with “everything”, as most things are not. But it is a common trick when a developer wants to make a “new” file format that encapsulates a bunch of different files.
This reads like you work for Gamers Nexus and aren’t shy about it
… and is not a regex
Welp, Ars Technica has another theory:
Microsoft’s Azure status page outlines several fixes. The first and easiest is simply to try to reboot affected machines over and over, which gives affected machines multiple chances to try to grab CrowdStrike’s non-broken update before the bad driver can cause the BSOD. Microsoft says that some of its customers have had to reboot their systems as many as 15 times to pull down the update.
That’s some high quality speculation
I am so confused. What’s supposed to happen on the 15th reboot?
I love how this works on two levels:
Oh - a lemon o’ pee!