Good on you!
After your first century, you'll want to do a double century π Never stop challenging yourself.
Good on you!
After your first century, you'll want to do a double century π Never stop challenging yourself.
He shouldn't have referred to it as "blocking ads."
Instead, say that you'll be explaining how to "preserve privacy" or "uncluttered the viewing experience", and it would be totally up to interpretation and assumption that he's actually talking about blocking ads.
Because social media amplifies and incentivises minority, hateful views to make it seem like everyone is concerned about these things.
The reality is, it's the same small group of hateful idiots who are always in the spotlight.
In real life, even in small towns, people either don't care or they celebrate how far we've come as a society.
rather than refresh for an easier one
That was one of the easy ones! They got more abstract and further from identical as you went on.
And the bastards set it up so they make you think you're solving 5 of these... then when you do the fifth one, they make you do 10... etc... infuriating.
βA few stakeholders were concerned that the release of the report would result in new legal action (criminal prosecution, citizen revocation, or otherwise) being brought against the individuals named in the report,β a summary of the libraryβs discussions noted.
Bro, WTF? Are these "stakeholders" also Nazis? Release their names, too.
Jesus Christ, let the Canadian public know who they are, and prosecute them as war criminals. Time does not invalidate what the Nazis did, and any that are still alive should still face the consequences of their actions.
Yes, a vibrating microphone made for her pleasure. π
I signed up to LinkedIn to get in touch with someone. Deleting the account the moment I get a reply. They couldn't pay me to put up with this nonsense. π
Just tried it, and it gave me 10 audio puzzles with three sounds per puzzle! These assholes are pure evil.
"Just to prove you are a member of MENSA..."
I went through the same dilemma. The old Synology photo software had a duplicate finder, but they removed that feature with the "new" version. But even with the duplicate finder, it wasn't very powerful and offered no adjustability.
In the end, I ended up paying for a program called "Excire Foto", which can pull images from my NAS, and can not only find duplicates in a customized and accurate way. It also has a localAI search that bests even Google Photos.
It runs from windows, saves its own database, and can be used as read-only, if you only want to make use of the search feature.
To me, it was worth the investment.
Side note: if I only had <50,000 photos, then I'd probably find a free/cheaper way to do it. At the time, I had over 150,000 images, going back to when the first digital cameras were available + hundreds of scanned negatives and traditional (film) photos, so I really didn't want to spend weeks sorting it all out!
Oh, the software can even tag your photos for subjects so that it's baked into the EXIF data (so other programs can make use of it).
I'm actually pretty happy to be using mostly FOSS apps. The exception are banking or services apps, which I'd never expect to be available as open source.