Got to have that high thread count, burst rate throughout. Does it have the cooled bobbin?
Got to have that high thread count, burst rate throughout. Does it have the cooled bobbin?
That belongs on /c/extremelyenraging.
I also think of The Ultimate Showdown too when I see this.
I had forgotten about Macromedia. I liked Dreamweaver before Adobe got its hands on it.
Well I don’t use obsidian as all. But as a matter of opening and linking notes, I use this tool because I like it, and it allows me to reference two separate vaults without issue.
I don’t either, but you don’t have to use that feature. I don’t. I just use with local db for that machine.
I use fish with atuin but without sync. It is nice because I can search commands for a given workspace. For example the commands within a given git repository.
There is no USB-B here and it is pretty hard to get the wrong direction anyway.
Six since it has A at both ends.
If you can write a moderately complex math equation in tex on the first try, you’re a programmer in my book.
Aren’t the x-suffixed files just an xml format?
I meant doesn’t change with respect to time zones. Leap times are still relevant in that scenario as each solar rotation doesn’t divide into a whole number of days and leap seconds due to variance in rotation.
With respect to the meridian I envision it rotating around the earth once per year, hence sidereal. So 0000 would rotate around the earth through the course of the year. Each day it would be one degree farther.
Most likely is I’m just completely full of shit.
My suggestion has always been universal sidereal time. It is singular, doesn’t change, and carries no colonial baggage since it rotates around the whole earth. Even suitable as a home time if we become spacefaring.
I guess I’m just lucky, but I’ve gotten nothing but thoughtful support on Arch forums and Stackoverflow. If you read the article How do I ask a good question?, it works very well. It seems harsh but coming with poorly thought out questions without debugging details makes it impossible to help.
While the subjective assessment that quote handling in yaml is worse than bash is understandable, it is really just two of many many cases where quotes complicate things. And for a pretty good reason. They are used to isolate strings in many languages, even prose. They, therefore, always get special handling in lexical analysis. Understanding which languages use single quotes, double quotes, backticks, heredocs, etc and when to use them is really just part of the game or the struggle I guess.
Damn right. And once it compiles… it works.
Only kind of. That’s a backronym.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_storage#History