The system can listen to conversations and play ads when there’s a moment of silence. Or play a video when you’re close to the shops.
Oh good, I was worried the slide into dystopia might be slowing down for a second there.
The system can listen to conversations and play ads when there’s a moment of silence. Or play a video when you’re close to the shops.
Oh good, I was worried the slide into dystopia might be slowing down for a second there.
Once again proving that the easiest way to work out how to do something in vim is to post something along the lines of “vim sucks because it can’t do x” online :)
This should be what finally starts the push to guillotine the upper management of Disney but I guess we’ve got to take whatever we can get.
Sure but the chances of your Windows and Linux machines shitting the bed at the same time is less than if everything is running Windows. It’s exactly the same reason you keep a physical copy (which after all can break/burn down etc.) - more baskets to spread your eggs across.
Gonna be a nice test of proper backups and disaster recovery protocols for some organisations
Got to get to Mars for those
Money is a hell of an aphrodisiac
This particular arms race began a couple of decades ago at least…
Did not know the thing about purposefully adding rogue tabs to kconfig files to catch poorly written parsers. That’s fucking hilarious and I’d love to have the kind of clout to get away with something like that rather than having to constantly work around other people’s mistakes.
Gonna need a bit more than that to go on. Was its functionality similar to exiv2? How long ago do you remember it from? Can you at least link the old SO post you found?