Shits kinda on fire and it's probably like 50% the USs fault.
But we kind of tend to start getting pissy with our pms after about 10 years,
Shits kinda on fire and it's probably like 50% the USs fault.
But we kind of tend to start getting pissy with our pms after about 10 years,
In the nicest way possible, you are likely colorblind then.
It's green and orange, not exactly difficult typically.
Because on lemmy a post getting 100 up votes is enough to end up somewhere high on all, so your seeing people from outside of the Linux community in here.
I'd love to, but Isreal seems intent on bombing everyone who enters Gaza. Aid workers, children, and evacuees alike.
But it has the benefit of not breaking down into micro plastics and getting into every part of everyone.
The so what is that this writer for the verge will likely never be trusted with NDA type pre-release access for any other games going forward, and this may even impact all of the Verge.
This isn't just a one and done kind of issue, this will be seen by the entire industry as a "can't trust that guy with pre-release access"
Literally all of them, but look at OpenSSL for a good example.
Literally everything runs off it these days, and it's like 3 guys and a trenchcoat working on it most of the time.
It's just how open source / the industry / people are. We all have our own stuff we want to do, so as long as the stuff your using works you don't tend to care, and if it doesn't you often don't have the time or resources to do anything other than tell the owner to fix it.
They don't want in, they setup camp outside the doors and pick fights with people who walk by. So staff are probably "closing" the entrances so people don't accidentally walk out into a warzone.
Canada geese are evil mean bastards
Except the C++ "Core dumped" line is telling you it just wrote a file out with the full state of the program at the time of the crash, you can load it up and see where it crashed and then go and look at what every local variable was at the time of the crash.
Pretty sure you can even step backwards in time with a good debugger to find out exactly how you got to the state you're currently in.
I know it's a quote, but if the brakes failed on an escalator then yes it would be unusable even as stairs, however you wouldn't be stuck on it at that point, you'd be in a pile at the bottom.
They aren't commercializing it, it just means they will require fewer flights to get scientists and their equipment down there. And the new plane is more efficient than the older ones they used.
In a "true free market" the instructions would be hoarded by the company that came up with them and the insulin would be sold for as much as humanly possible. The only countries that don't suffer from this issue are the ones where the government is handling Healthcare and dictates what it's willing to pay for medicine.
You anti government regulation types sure as fuck don't seem to understand how we got to having all these regulations. Hint it was companies abusing their customers and employees to the point where tens of thousands of people were dying, for each regulation.