57% If Floridians voted in favor of abortion rights.
I’m Hunter Perrin. I’m a software engineer.
I wrote an email service: https://port87.com
I write free software: https://github.com/sciactive
57% If Floridians voted in favor of abortion rights.
I’m more worried about the floating books.
Turns out, the sky is pretty thick if you hit it hard enough.
There’s so much boilerplate to even do the most simple tasks. And that boilerplate is something that could usually be automatically added by a compiler.
That kind of stuff often introduces footguns.
I use Svelte, and I love it. Although I’m not a huge fan of the new Runes syntax. It’ll probably grow on me though.
I fucking hate React. It’s slow, verbose, and unpleasant to work with. It’s all the worst parts of Java brought over to JavaScript. That being said, it’s still better than Angular.
You had focus before?
The number of votes that each candidate gets is unbiased information. It is determined by using addition to count them, which is also an unbiased methodology.
C-Span will have election night coverage:
https://www.c-span.org/video/?539795-1/spectrum-news-election-night-coverage
Well duh. They’re the enforcers. The enforcers don’t need to follow the rules.
Sure, but those kinds of lights are very dim. You can just use a dimmer bulb set to very low if you want that kind of longevity.
Oh, that sounds really cool! Thank you for the explanation.
What does it do?
If Apple would implement Vulkan, it would probably happen.
The cheapest one I know of is about $8 a month, so it should be affordable, even on a tight budget.
You can buy a super cheap cloud VM and use a (self hosted) VPN so it can access your own PC and a reverse proxy to forward all incoming requests to your own PC behind your school’s network.
It’s arguable whether this would violate their policy, since you are technically hosting something, but not accessible on the internet from their IP. So if you wanna be safe, don’t do this, otherwise, that could help you get started.
Basically all of the time you’re alive will be after the heat death of the universe, where you will be floating in space, with nothing to do, nothing to see, nothing to experience. Complete darkness, complete silence, in a complete vacuum, for eternity. Every other particle in the universe is forever out of your reach. You know that you will have nothing forever. You will never see, hear, or touch anything again, for all of time, which will never end. The trillions of years that preceded your float through the void fade into a distant memory as you outlive twice as much time, four times as much, a trillion-trillion times as much, and infinitely more.
Yes, but then you’re not using IMAP.
If you’re using IMAP, the emails aren’t completely downloaded by Thunderbird, just the headers.
Fedora, but I wouldn’t say I’m in love with it. It frustrates me the least. No Linux distro is perfect, but they’re all better than Windows.