

The FootyScran twitter account catalogues some similar examples
Relevant daily game: scrandle.
The FootyScran twitter account catalogues some similar examples
Relevant daily game: scrandle.
I think they meant the horse-like things on the casino planet.
Ironically, everyone hated it because they thought it would cause fragmentation.
it’s all bespoke
Unfortunately, that’s by design. Mir was the display server that tried to combat that exact problem, and we burned it at the stake.
As if the original comic wasn’t reductive and unnecessarily dismissive enough, you’ve somehow made it worse. Let people make things if they think they have a shot at it, please.
Oh, that’s nice, TIL. But still, there are other projects that do just directly download from GitHub when building, buildroot for example.
Compiling any larger go application would hit this limit almost immediately. For example, podman is written in go and has around 70 dependencies, or about 200 when including transitive dependencies. Not all the depends are hosted on GitHub, but the vast majority are. That means that with a limit of 60 request per hour it would take you 3 hours to build podman on a new machine.
Not to mention, if you have the model you can print it even long after the product support has ended. No company will support a product they stopped making half a decade ago, but you’ll still be able to print parts the same way.
These are such minor changes. The first two videos merely change the animation curve - that’s the animation equivalent of changing the colour of a button.
The brown is bad, but to be fair to the right side, it’s the left one that has bad reflections and is blurry - it was released when bloom effects were new and it used them way too much.
APT 3.0 is powered by Solver3, a new, more efficient package dependency resolver that significantly improves how package installations and upgrades are handled. As a backtracking algorithm, it allows for more efficient dependency resolution and better handling of complex package conflicts.
That’s nice, hope it leads to fewer kernel removals, apt is always so eager to remove the kernel.
Unfortunately, almost all of them are mediatek based, so while that makes rooting easier, there’s very little chance of getting a custom ROM running on them.
Oh wow, I loved that. Thank you for sharing.
Looks amazing. What lens is that? Looks like you made your own helicoid focus too, how smooth is it?
I was thinking of making myself a 35mm panoramic view camera using a Mamiya press lens, but I’ve never used a large format camera so many details about the lens are still a bit unclear to me.
Edit: oh, I see your other post has more technical details.
The software runs, but unfortunately the manufacturers didn’t bother writing any drivers. I considered getting a ThinkPad x13s some months ago, but the driver support is so bad it couldn’t even do suspend properly. And this laptop was released 3 years ago.
Storage is cheap on a PC, it’s not cheap on mobile where it’s fixed and used as a model differentiator. They overcharge you so much. Oh, and they removed SD card slots from nearly all phones.
The success of FOSS can in large part be attributed to copyleft licenses like the GPL. Without the protections of copyleft clauses, software just gets exploited by large corporations and end users are locked out. For just one example, if GNU software had used MIT, the entire free router movement (i.e ddwrt, openwrt and co.) would probably not exist today.
See: Free Software Foundation, Inc. v. Cisco Systems, Inc..
Edit: actually, I think by the time of this specific lawsuit, the sources for wrt54g were already released after community pressure, this article details the history a bit better.
Well the rust project is MIT licensed, so definitely not.
Can you share more details please?