Free as in "free at the point of service".
Of course it is paid for somehow.
But as far a a someone going into a hospital to get a cast, medicine, birth... It's free
towerful
Who cares what people imply.
Bring receipts you fucking idiot.
If it was anything more than misinformation, you would be pointing to credible reports, news outlets, proof.
But yes, if Ukraine was committing genocide, then I would want it similarly sanctioned/punished
This is the classic "Boblin the Goblin" DND meme
I think you are forgetting about Systemd/Linux
Just add an autounattend.xml answers file in the iso before installing windows.
I use https://schneegans.de/windows/unattend-generator/
Recently I had to re-install and configure a bunch of software on 20ish machines.
All I had to type during the install was the hostname, and powershell scripts did the rest (granted, those powershell scripts contained all the bullshit to get windows to actually behave and work like a proper OS).
Why can you never have more that one egg?
Cause one egg is Un œuf (enough)
My favourite bilingual joke. It's so silly, it's so fantastic
Just leaving this here....
The first play part is setting up arbitrary (in this case, player-entered) code execution.
The 2nd part is entering the arbitrary code to be executed.
The 3rd part is the arbitrary code being executed.
From the description:
This is a Tool-assisted run of Pokémon Yellow, playing around with arbitrary code execution and testing the limits of Gameboy hardware.
Tool-assisted meaning a program entering the data into the game. A lot of times tool-assisted is in the context of a speed run, a TAS (tool-assisted speedrun).
A TAS file can be shared and perfected by many people, and reflects the most optimised way to finish a game as fast as possible.
Sometimes TAS runs include techniques that are "TAS only", an extreme example being alternating between left & right every frame for 30 seconds. Sometimes these "TAS only" techniques end up being performed by actual speed runners. And some TAS runs are "Human viable" as in "no techniques used that can't be executed by a speed runner".
Some TAS systems can interface with an actual console, pretending to be a controller (called "TAS Bot" I believe). Generally, they run the game in an emulator or interface with an emulator.
So, this video is about a TAS (well, the tool-assisted part, not necessarily the speedrun part) setting up arbitrary code execution (ACE) that then executes a bunch of user-entered code, which is what happens in the rest of the video
reattaching cables should be easy enough to a new unit in case of replacement
Unless, for whatever reason, the pinout on the new unit is different from the old unit.
I almost fried my PC with that, before I paused and beeped the new and old cables out and realised they were wired differently.
Misinformation = mistakes?
So disinformation leads to misinformation?