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Yeah, the body has a way of shutting that whole thing down.
Yeah, the body has a way of shutting that whole thing down.
Quite the contrary, it had exemplary compatibility, including Plug’n’Play and wide native USB support.
Windows 2000 was the last Windows that I felt I could just slap on any old hardware.
You don’t sound like you’re comfortable with the command line.
Never thought I’d see the day. This is quite a valid strategy when both your console and your content are able to stand on their own - something that Microsoft forgot after the XBox 360.
git gud
Edit: c’mon, y’all, it’s a git joke.
Just write a driver for it
“That’s my name! You got it in one! Good job!”
Dedicated to testing, absolutely, but they don’t necessarily require expertise regarding implementation.
Not to mention the fact that the more code there is, the more bugs you have.
It draws unfortunate parallels.
I do agree that the proposals to abolish “black” feel a bit misguided though surely well-intentioned; the etymology of “blacklist,” for example, has no relation to race whatsoever. However, there are unfortunate parallels with how “black” and “white” people were and indeed are still treated differently.
It is stupid, and it’s because of a failure to understand the nuance.
I will not inconvenience myself or anyone else by making any changes to existing configurations, which will surely break workflows, but I don’t give a shit what the main branch is called as long as it’s obvious.
There aren’t “slaves” in git, though. The term “master” in that context is that of a master copy.
I’d argue that abolishing the term “slave” isn’t the worst idea, implying that the word “master,” only in context where it’s paired with “slave,” should go as well - but that, of course, requires nuance, which a simple word filter lacks.
No, you can’t say “master,” either.
So it’s Linux, but not GNU/Linux.
What exactly is CNN trying to accomplish with this hit piece?