

It’s so weird that players these days don’t press buttons and figure shit out on their own…do you really need a tutorial for a basic weapon?
It’s so weird that players these days don’t press buttons and figure shit out on their own…do you really need a tutorial for a basic weapon?
Many of them actually do. Report any model that doesn’t have a printed picture with it and printables/makerworld will both take them down. I only know this because I’ve had my own models ‘limited’ in this way until I added a picture of the print I had done.
Linux is going to shit when this man dies. He has such a stringent quality requirement that he’s quite possibly the only reason Linux is the behemoth king that it is today. Humans are lazy, unqualified, and the fact that this man tells it like it is so often, and so brashly is why I will continue to use Linux; because I can trust that this guy keeps all the garbage out.
Valid.
See now you’re getting it. Your post just now…
Irony.
So you’ve managed to look up the definition and STILL don’t understand. That’s pretty amazing on your part.
Because sarcasm in this case pointedly gets it wrong. It does so on purpose to convey absurdity (generally as a reply to something which the poster thinks is as equally absurd as their own statement)
The rail is definitely not put there to protect the trees, and then the absurdity of it is expounded upon by adding the zoo statement.
Your post wasn’t Irony, it was sarcasm.
The problem is once you put people on this path of playing the victim, they see everything through the lens of being personally wronged. They incorrectly attribute all attributes of everything, eventually, to someone attempting to harm them in some way. Thankfully this community still has their wits about them, but I see this happen everywhere on the internet.
https://caddyserver.com/download
Use this if xcaddy is too much.
Select your platform, then just click the little boxes next to the modules you want included, then hit the download button
deleted by creator
Seconding Caddy – It’s as close to it gets for “Just works”. It handles all the certs, it’s easy to refresh and add a subdomain instantly, handles wildcard domains, and the config file is dead simple to understand.
You can use https://xcaddy.tech/ to build Caddy with various plugins, I use mine with transform-encoder so that logs can be made compatible with fail2ban.
Even if we didn’t totally abolish cars, I’d really like to at least see parts of the city for “personal transport”. Any vehicle that carries a single person, with lanes only as wide as required to accommodate.
Bikes are to walking as cars are to bikes. You should all be walking, stupid bikers. (/s if it’s not obvious)
Well I have a litany of medical conditions, from IBS, to ADHD, PTSD, UTIs, STDs and more! I will LITERALLY shit all over you! (probably myself too!)
There’s just this weird shit everyone is into now where they collect as many alphabet letters as they can. The more alphabet you have, the more powerful you are.
The only thing that plex has over jellyfin at the moment (in my opinion) is the simple sign on and user options that allow users to have their own usernames and not have to know anything about reverse-proxying a domain for jellyfin access. It’s that little bit of back-end that you have to set up that’s the problem for the ‘normie’ users that a lot of plex admins cater to. That, and there’s some holes in where the jellyfin app is available.
Exactly. These machines can get pretty tight tolerances, but 0.05mm – this is reaching into ‘high precision’ machining territory, and there is no real reason for that with these machines.
Games should allow you to discover their features, they shouldn’t be telling you directly. That’s the cool part of figuring out a new combo in Mortal Kombat, etc.
They don’t give you a clippy tooltip that says “Press Up Up Down B A Down Down to rip this bitches head off!” – You figure out the combos on your own, or with friends.
This idea of every little thing having to be presented DIRECTLY to the user is laziness. There are ways to help a user discover things narratively.