Old Nokias are so great, they don't need battery.
I wonder what the root of "special appearance" is. All their cargo cult is based on a misinterpreted actual law.
say it's not the right time of day for donuts
This feels like it's taken right out of a video game.
It's wild to think a machine which is built to detect alcohol in your breath is less reliable than a human interpreting the dance of another human. "The breathalyzer showed 0.07 but I let them do the dance and it looked more like a 0.09 to me, so I took them in."
And for anyone claiming other substances will not show in a breathalyzer but the dancing. That's what swab tests are for. Collect sample, let chemicals do their thing and decide on wether the indicator turned red or green, with way less interpretation needed than an arbitrary dance.
Crap, well now I keep it that way. ^^
Do I see a repo the generic opera reference here?
Yay, where do I sign up? (Jk, I'm already a beta tester)
For domains, you actually own them. If you define ownership as being able to trade them compared to leasing something where you are not allowed to sell the item for example.
I'll save y'all the search an tell you it costs about 950€ plus shipping for a 5 kg behemoth of a keyboard. And plus any tariffs, should you live in freedom land and tariffs are currently applicable.
(* freedom sold separately)
That's your mistake there, you should appeal Damian Clearance not David Clarence. Rookie mistake.
I think spoilers are still not working. (Please do not interpret "still" as impatience).
Edit: yup, still not working.
Edit 2: the new 1.0.15 interested support for spoilers, yay!
The alternative is "just serve it as a regular website". It doesn't need to be an app to do its job. Name a functionality which only exists in electron but not in the standard browser API.
You usually get the book corresponding to your faith, so that would be an option. Given that the Bible (can't speak mich about it but way less about the others) has chapters and verses and what not, addressing single words is simple.
For the "name of relative is the code", yeah that needs a good memory.
Your options depend on how much code you can agree on. Ask about imaginary relatives map each name to a meaning, so asking about the health of Aunt Judy could mean that the prison refuses your access to a lawyer and telling you thought about Uncle Sam could mean they keep you in solitary. Or whatever facts you want to communicate. Your revolutionary friends could respond in the same manner. The flaw is in being limited to previously agreed upon code words.
If you have access to a common book, you can refer to words by page, line and word number. You could embed the numbers as words in a story you are writing to your (imaginary) child. "Behind the seven hills, there were five houses with nine rooms each" can translate to "take the 9th word on page seven, line five". Obviously you need the exact same copy of the book for this to work, the Bible is quite common for this cipher.
I knew my current, quite cheap doesn't do it like the one my parents had during my childhood. That one made a way more consistent "cooking sound".
If he continues to play deus ex human revolution, he will eventually learn why it didn't work out that easily even in the future Detroit.
There was a big git hoster (cough bitbucket cough) who didn't have support for signed commits until a few months ago. But the signature is only considered good if the pubkey you uploaded contains the mail you use for logging in. Because surely no sane person would have more than one mail, right?
You could even say it has 3901000 mAh. (I show myself out)
We manage our "food inventory" with Grocy which calls itself "the ERP beyond your fridge". It basically tracks every single purchase and consumption of food and also each items best before date. It needs a bit initial setup and you need to remind yourself to checkout stuff you consume but then it's just great. Not a single item spoiled because it got pushed too far back on the shelf. And since Grocy knows how much of what item we want in stock, it automatically writes our shopping lists with stuff which is about to run out.
So the shopping is basically day to day as we return from work and pass the store just ticking things off the list. And we made a rule for ourselves to only buy the stuff on the list, nothing extra to avoid impulse purchases.
The domain itself is a joke on its own.