"Ten Bits" seems viable, although nobody cares much about the Spanish real anymore.
HakFoo
Not even an isekai.
Arguably, one of the best possible worlds.
I put out one of those big plastic storage units with like 30 little drawers recently, figuring although 2 were missing, someone could still use it. I stood it next to the dustbin, on trash day where it would be optimally visible for anyone who wanted to scrounge it.
The bloody HOA took a picture and sent a nastygram.
It's a seasonal product that drives added purchases, not the core line.
You bring out six exotic flavours a year and 3 million people buy 6 more bags of crisps each year. 5,000 of them get obsessed and buy 50 bags of Cinnamon and Prawn crisps because they're only here for a two-month window. Sales of plain and Sour Cream and Onion crisps are largely unchanged.
Check a local coin dealer/show.
Silver ounce rounds come in infinitely many designs, and there are a lot of right-wingers in those interest groups.
I'm pretty sure I've seen them done up with his ugly maw on. I think sometines as copper too.
Discussion: you can have an "extinction event" in any ecosystem-- not just biological ones.
For example, the abandonment of steam locomotives in the mid-20th-century, or the Home Computer crash of the 1980s.
Similar to a biological mass extinction, you have:
- A discernable ecosystem change, either a sudden event (the introduction of reliable, mass-produced diesel locomotives), or a measurable decline of "habitability factors" (as hundreds of firms brought cheap 8-bit computers to market, retail space and overall consumer interest saturated)
- a rapid diversification of new and exotic types to fill the vacated niches (the cabless "B-unit" and flexible "road-switcher" locomotive types didn't exist in the steam era. The post-crash computer market brought in new entrants like cheap IBM clones, the C128 and Atari 130XE, all chasing a sub-$1000 market that was now free of Sinclair, Coleco, and Texas Instruments)
- followed by a shake out and consolidation of the survivors/winners as they select for fitness in the new world (ALCO was a strong #2 in the diesel locomotive market in 1950, but didn't make it to 1970. The C128 never became the world-beater its predecessor did.)
- a few niches largely untouched (China was still building steam locomotives into the 1990s. The Apple II series lasted about as long.)
Someone read a 1980s high school home-ec textbook, with the diagram noting that kitchen efficiency required the sink, stove, and fridge on facing walls, and ever since, would not take NO for an answer.
A month or so ago; I had a 32G card, and bought a 128G card.
If there's such a fear of third parties cleaving off votes from the Democrats, why have they never tried to mobilize similar forces on the right?
We had the Libertarians right there, before they imploded.
My objections:
- It doesn't adequately indicate "confidence". It could return "foo" or "!foo" just as easily, and if that's one term in a nested structure, you could spend hours chasing it.
- So many hallucinations-- inventing methods and fields from nowhere, even in an IDE where they're tagged and searchable.
Instead of writing the code now, you end up having to review and debug it, which is more work IMO.
Isn't that Perona's attack in One Piece?
Followup in the spirit of documenting it for someone else: If you modify the fonts in qt5ct.conf, removing the last option, for some reason it does exactly what I want: looking at notepadqq, I get a bold menu, but non-bold body text.
[Fonts]
fixed="Go Mono,11,-1,5,50,1,0,0,0,0,0"
general="Helvetica,11,-1,5,75,0,0,0,0,0"
It seems like removing the last paramater treats the specification as less prescriptive-- places in the UI that call for bold get it, and non-bold gets it. This is evident in the Double Commander Qt package, where some parts of the UI are bold and others aren't.