I want to understand this comment!
I want to understand this comment!
I usually refer to im as “vi” just to make people think I’m old school and cool save time typing that last character.
But Obsidian??
Yeah that’s what I mean; this is a bit edgier than I’d expect out of him these days. To be fair people often tend to become less piracy-enthusiastic once they publish their own books!
He’s gotten a bit less edgy over the years. Mostly in good ways.
I’m curious what’s the financial outcome here for the customers? I don’t remember what Humane’s price model for these pins was, and none of these articles are discussing it. For example… Eh I’ll just look it up.
Oh my god it was $500-$700 up front plus a $25 monthly fee. That’s just horrible; will the customers be getting refunds? [Looks it up] Nope.
https://www.theverge.com/24126502/humane-ai-pin-review
https://support.humane.com/hc/en-us/articles/34243204841997-Ai-Pin-Consumers-FAQ
Thank you!
That’s interesting. What kind of massage are you talking about here?
To be quite honest I never allowed my Kindle or my Kobo to go online and the experience is not that different. The build quality on the Kindle is a bit better superior and I might well go back. Calibre is the real hero of the story IMO.
I just got a Kobo color (don’t recommend the color feature; no book is ever going to use it except the red-letter Bible and House of Leaves) and gifted the old Kindle to a friend. I e-reader is an awesome gift actually because for a lot of people it’s something they would never evenly in years take a chance on, but that they would love it if they tried.
Interesting. Is this top answer accurate then?
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31731980/handling-a-linux-system-shutdown-operation-gracefully
When I first saw this, I thought the implication was that they used real archers and the actors protected themselves by wearing these devices that would somehow block and capture the arrows, which would also miraculously never miss
Did they stop using these? Looks just as good as CGI… Actor is probably a lot more aware of it…
Swing and a miss
I’ve gone back and forth between a common bashrc file in my Dropbox folder that is symlinked to ~/.bashrc on my devices, and one that is imported from a regular bashrc instead, and recently it ended up in a state where it accidentally tried to do both, resulting in an endless loop. I discovered this on my Pop!_OS PC, which reacted to this situation by crashing on login lol. What??
Ocaml stands for “Objective Categorical Abstract Machine Language”, so it’s pronounced like “Camel” but not named after it, unfortunately
Don’t touch my garbage! 😾
You don’t need admin to plug your computer into the AV do you? I assumed it was OP’s computer.
How does this chrome add-on get installed in the first place?
What language is that engineer and a nerd one?