

as one of their customers, I second this
as one of their customers, I second this
Is there a web archive equivalent to github repos? At least for the most popular ones.
I know there are hard copies in Svalbard’s seed vault, but they’re more for a one-in-thousands-of-years post-apocalyptic scenarios than this.
Without knowing the “higher” reality, I’d still call it a simulation. An emulator is capable of replacing the “real” system it’s emulating. Maybe that’s your view on the topic, but I find it more likely the higher reality is more complex than ours because it contains ours. Therefore our reality could not be an emulation. Lots of speculation though.
cause it looks cooler
- the victim was having a fever, your honor!
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if you need less than 4TB just get a solid state
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I got the HL-L2325DW last year. Connecting it to the WiFi using WPS was really easy. Making the desktop see it was a bit of trial and error, but it was partially thanks to the PDF viewer I was using, so I’d recommend printing from a well established viewer like Okular or the web browser, at least for the first use.
I don’t remember having to download any drivers manually from their website btw, I just chose it from the list when setting up a new printer. This process might change with the distro and desktop environment though, I’m using Kubuntu.
In fact, if you’re a bit lucky, the printer might even show up as a “discovered device” after you connect it to your network, even with a suggested driver and connection so you just need to press next.
“Desktop OS” also counts laptops. Unless people are working from their smartphones, I don’t think desktop is collapsing at all.
I had premium up until a year ago, but I can’t recommend it anymore after their purchase.
Choose open source, people.
function command_one() {
# activate the environment
source "$XDG_DATA_HOME/venvs/alpha.sh"
# run the thing
actual_command_one
}
function command_two() {
# activate the environment
source "$XDG_DATA_HOME/venvs/alpha.sh"
source "$XDG_DATA_HOME/venvs/bravo.sh"
# run the other thing
actual_command_two
}
They’re not permissions, it’s a privacy policy. I don’t know why OP called them permissions.
They’re not permissions, they’re the types of data that may be collected. Every popular closed source app has a similar obscene list of private data they may collect, but in most cases it’s the user that chooses to provide that kind of information voluntarily anyways.
I don’t think these are permissions, just a list of collected data categories. Google Play’s equivalent is the “Data Safety” section and lists the data collected, shared with third parties, and security practices in use. Basically just a more readable privacy policy, but agreeing to that by installing the app does not grant the app with the equivalent permissions automatically.
My own intricate system of 4 git repos to manage dotfiles, bash initialization, cli tools/scripts, and system state.
The last one keeps track of installed packages and “dotfiles” out of the home directory (system config files like /etc/hosts).