Another good reason to remove the jack.
More products broken out of warranty, more sales.
Another good reason to remove the jack.
More products broken out of warranty, more sales.
Unless you are in India.
Their customer service apparently drove a relative of mine to Apple.
Also some of the cheaper Nokia ones have a great number of problems:
Some high end model had its LCD liquidate somehow, without a visible crack and was not covered in warranty.
… Except when it doesn’t.
I use Gnome at work, on an older (supposedly stable) version of RedHat and there are a few ways it breaks, but when it does, it Breaks Bad. I would be fine with said breakages if it were not trying to claim focussing on having lesser bugs and in turn reducing customisability to such low levels that changing stuff like animation speed (which, by default is set to productivity destroying speeds), is not possible from the default repos.
KDE and related applications are much more tolerable and when I find a bug I tend to be happy to report.
Who says you can’t have an underground workshop, a gaming setup, a matrix+lemmy+mastodon server, an underground FTTH connection, an escape tunnel with a joyride leading straight to the highway and 100m below all of that, a nuclear power plant.
Ok, maybe someone will say something about the last one, but… You know?
I keep the roll on its side (vertical, with circular face down).
Also, I don’t use it to wipe my butt. I have a handheld water shower directing device (a.k.a. health faucet) for that.
Ah right! I forgot about that.
So you either have to pad all instructions in all previous binaries, or reduce the amount of available instructions in the arch update.
RV64 has a maximum 32-bit instruction encoding
I kinda expected that to happen, since there’s already enough to fit all required functions. So yeah, even this is not a good enough criteria for bit rating.
those original 8-bit intructions still exist, and take up a huge part of the encoding space, cutting the number of n-bit instructions to more like 2^(n-7)
err… they are still instructions, right? And they are implemented. I don’t see why you would negate that from the number of instructions.
I see it as the number of possible instructions.
As in, 8 bit 8085 had 28 possible instructions, 32 bit ones had 232 and already had enough possible combinations that we couldn’t come up with enough functions to fill the provided space.
“I can’t be racist because, I hate absolutely every one, irrespective of caste/creed/religion/number and shape of genitals/color(also, color of genitals)/age/region/domain/kingdom/phylum/class/order/family/genus/species/base chemical composition/geometrical structure/level of consciousness/lifespan/definition of life, equally.”
How about that.
You don’t need to upload it, just do ![annotation text here](link to gif)
Right. Because after you buy it, it is your drone made by DJI and not DJI’s drone.
Guess some of the laws still have their premises correct.
I just went “Shiit! Am I sitting on potential system breakage?” (because I don’t remember doing any such intervention)
But turns out it was just a conflicts with change.
From what I know, pacman
straight-up asks you what you want, in these cases.
Sure, it’s technically manual intervention, but for me, who scans over updated packages every-time, this is considered standard procedure.
Manual intervention is when GRUB doesn’t install properly using the suggested command and you have to learn where your distro places the boot image and configure stuff accordingly.
Also, I don’t have JDK so…
You ppl don’t use auto archive/categorise/delete ?
Yet another case showing how useful drones are.
Meaning, if you have it, you can do what you want other than (re)selling it?
Not really.
Microsoft won’t explain further after “we end support”.
They are now the “Something went wrong” people.
I’m pretty sure that’s an example of why you should use the chosen ones instead of going “mancy/nancy” all over the place.
Also, didn’t they just make a standard for themselves and other just took it because it was probably easier than making one for their own language (oh right, NATO… but let’s be honest here, NATO is just a forum for America to flaunt its power while PR-ing peaceful, so it makes sense they use English, which is also easier to be a second language than most other ones).
Though I feel like China might have made their own.
The radio words were chosen to be distinct, such that for people who trained in them, it would be easier to distinguish letters being spoken over low quality radio.
Not very relevant in the era of 2G HD audio, and now VoLTE.
But when there’s a bad signal and you have to tell someone a callsign, it makes sense.
I like ISO, because in whatever cases I have interacted with it, it has made programming easier for me.
I like YYYY-MM-DD, because when files lose their metadata, if they are named using this, I can still sort by name and get results by date.
Err… no.
But I was talking about the workplace computer, so… No idea