Ah I know what those are, that makes sense!
Formerly /u/neoKushan on reddit
Ah I know what those are, that makes sense!
Non American here, I have no idea what these are but see them mentioned a lot - what are they? Are they crackers, sweets or biscuits?
One that always stood out to me was the ending of the Tom Cruise war or the world’s movie.
Now to be clear, this is not a good film and I don’t recommend that anyone bothers to go watch it, but a criticism I regularly saw was that the ending was bad - the aliens all just die suddenly.
That was literally the only thing that film got right from the source material. They changed literally everything else in an attempt to modernise it, it didn’t work but they at least kept the ending and that’s the bit people didn’t like.
I think if you’re comparing open world games to open world games then yeah, BOTW doesn’t do anything too terribl differenty, but when you compare BOTW to other Zelda games then it’s very different and that’s where the criticism comes from.
Personally I feel BOTW is a very competent open world game, probably one of the better ones I’ve played but I still didn’t gel with it because I was already strongly feeling fatigued from too many games becoming open world and not making that leap particularly well (Mass Effect Andromeda and FFXV coming to mind for me personally), what I wanted was a more traditional Zelda game and that’s simply not what BOTW was.
I love my partners and my son, but I hate most other humans.
In addendum, they also operate a browser extension that puts the same pricing info directly into steam itself, as well as other enhancements:
Well worth having installed, that way you can browse steam (via your browser) as normal and know if a good deal is actually good.
Definitely do! It’s entirely command line driven, but don’t let that put you off, it’s quite easy to use and well thought out.
If that’s still a concern, there’s also backrest, a project that puts a web UI in front of restic:
I have a Nas running nextcloud for general ease of automatically backing up anything important from my phone or pc.
Nextcloud and important things from the server are backed up using a tool called “restic” which honestly does not get enough mention here.
Restic is amazing, it supports just about every cloud storage provider out there - could be Amazon S3 or backblaze, but it could also be OneDrive or Google drive. If you’ve got some cloud storage somewhere, restic will probably support it.
Restic is super clever, it takes snapshots and only backs up any data that has changed - so it’s very space efficient and fast. I back up hourly, it only takes a few mins and if nothing has changed, there cost is also basically nothing. But you can pull back files from any snapshots you keep and when you delete a snapshot, it only deletes data that’s not used by any snapshot.
This means you can have backups going back months or years at very little data cost. You can restore a full backup, or just a specific file if you need.
Seriously, restic is amazing and more people need to know about it.
Multicast is a thing, though it doesn’t seem to be widespread. That would make a lot more sense than this weird DRM broadcast system.
I wish people would just stop assuming that we know what every single piece of software is.
This is a privacy oriented and deblobbed web browser based on Mozilla technology. It enables many features upstreamed by the Tor uplift project using preferences from the arkenfox-user.js project. It is compiled from source and proprietary blobs are removed using scripts by Relan from here.
That seems entirely pointless then, why not just stream the content.
Interrobang.
It’s this thing: ‽
More people should use the symbol because it looks cool and has a badass name, so for that you need to know what it’s called.
Who’s with me‽
Lemmy is way more susceptable to bots than Reddit is, we just don’t see it as much because we’re a lot smaller. But if Lemmy grows, it’ll become a major problem for us too.
I find jiras search to be decent enough, you might get better results using a filter on sprint name with your current sprint in it.
Honestly 95% of Jira complaints are because people have crap workflows configured. Out of the box Jira is pretty terrible but it’s very customisable and you need to adjust it to suit your needs - and they have to be your needs and workflows.
That being said, there’s that last 5% that Jira just gets in the way. If anyone has ever had multiple teams working on a single product, Jira is very prescribed about how you’re supposed to structure that and If you don’t, it’s a pain.
Stagnation is Mozilla’s MO. Fuck, go look at Thunderbird and be transported back to the 90’s.
Even Microsoft is updating outlook - fucking outlook is innovating, Outlook being the cancer on email that’s held it back for decades, is being updated.
The £ key on GB keyboards is shift+3.
This is the way to do it - actual valid certs, with actual working TLS.
OP’s issue is they don’t understand how SSL works and fighting Firefox, which is actually trying to protect them and steer they e in the right direction.
For that chrome book like experience, the genuinely think Chrome OS flex is probably a better option for most people (privacy concerns not withstanding).