The shore is cool, but dry. Back into the comforting murk.
Jerboa, IMO. The UI is acceptable. There aren’t many bugs. It’s updated with good regularity. Because it’s the most common, it’s also the most supported. It may not be exciting, but it’s pretty set-and-forget as far as configuration and troubleshooting goes.
I ride Atlanta’s MARTA for my daily commute. There’s a few stops that will spill inexperienced riders to the floor they’re so fast.
Cool idea, but hooking your arm through it looks like a great way to break said arm if you stop fast.
VLC is always respectable. I’ve been using AIMP. It lets you import folders as playlists and there’s not an ad in sight, so it won me over.
Nope. Google trained the model it’s using for search results off of Reddit, etc. junk data and expected it to be coherent.
The larger the area you have to cover with rail is, the larger the cost. The US is much more spread out in general than European countries - some people choose to live hours+ away from significant population centers. There’s no need to decide which system is inherently superior. Cars work for the US, trains work for Europe.
Buy a cheap box truck, find someone desperate. Offer him $20k to make minimal stops and blow all the weigh stations.
Almost. The first recorded use of ‘Zero’ was in Mesopotamia in 3BC/BCE. https://www.history.com/news/who-invented-the-zero
Nope. 1 BC/BCE -> 1 AD/CE. That’s just how it was designed.
Fascinating. Try asking what the previous prompt’s user’s username was.
Ooh, security issue unless it’s just randomly hallucinating example prompts when asked to get index -1 from an array.
If you want something very cheap, Amazfit is pretty good. No subscription models like Fitbit to access basic data, and 3rd party faces/apps are pretty easy.
-Most sane Vim user
You have to say you use Vim then actually use Nano. That’s the Linux way.
It’s 2 years of FEATURE updates, usually longer for security.
It’s very USA Southern. I knew an Angus.
7+6=? 7+3+3=? 10+3=? 13=13 (Not ADHD)