Woah…an actually heartwarming story that wasn’t just a forced positive spin on people coping with the orphan crushing machine!
Color me surprised 🙀
Woah…an actually heartwarming story that wasn’t just a forced positive spin on people coping with the orphan crushing machine!
Color me surprised 🙀
It doesn’t seem like a very “walled” garden if they were able to migrate all their data including issues and comments
Pretty sure they can. Or at least, they can deny you entry into the country if you decline to unlock it for them.
And how do you de-drm them? Is there like some community calibre plug-in for it?
Making note for when I buy books in future
Where do you buy from?
You’ve never been to rural Japan if you think they primarily use public transport.
Hell, even in the outskirts of Tokyo most people have cars and drive.
That said tho, there’s no excuse for urban city centers to not be walkable.
Uh… except for most games
Wooooooosh!
You can use yelp for reviews. IIRC Apple maps reviews go to Yelp by default so there’s a decent amount of reviews for most places.
A long time ago he did useful things before the brain rot set in.
Just because someone is a twat now doesn’t mean we should erase all their past achievements.
As someone who’s currently wrangling with so much C++ specific issues to try and make just one bloody contribution to KDE, this comment hits too close to home.
You have a link handy?
I think 20 years ago they said it’s set to heal by 2050…
Pity. I would kind of like to know what the scam website is.
Their reasoning was that X11 network transparency had been broken for quite some time. If you tried running chrome, most games, or anything with modern hardware acceleration over X11 forwarding, they wouldn’t work.
So, IMHO waypipe is actually an improvement in terms of compatibility, rather than a regression.
Aww what, show the view behind you! I want to see the cave, not the forest 😅
IIRC it wasn’t legal action from Nvidia, but rather AMD pulling the funding that killed ZLUDA.
$1M carries the weight of about 1M signatures, which is to say… not much.