Yes, but I tend to always use the same two or three servers and they get saved. So, switching afterwards is seamless and as straight forward as with the app. Easier, even.
Use wireguard or any other open client, and use the credentials files generated with the provider. Same servers but an actually functioning, integrated and FOSS software.
I doubt any higher up is "barely scraping by". And as another comment brought up the recipes, this is most definitely a bot.
Spanish here. Latin American dubs are made by some of the most talented voice actors and sometimes their performances outshine the original actors to the point some of them are celebrities on their own right. Stargate's was really good.
Except, that's in the real world of physics. In this mathematical/philosophical hypothetical metaphysical scenario, x is infinite. Thus the probability is 1. It doesn't just approach infinite, it is infinite.
It's not close to 100%, it is by formal definition 100%. It's a calculus thing, when there's a y value that depends on an x value. And y approaches 1 when x approaches infinity, then y = 1 when x = infinite.
Indeed, the formal definition actually doesn't specify how many monkeys will write what given an infinite number of monkeys, it's unknowable (that's just how probability is). We just know that it will almost surely happen, but that doesn't mean it will happen an infinite amount of occurrences.
The infinite amount of time version is just as vague, one monkey will almost surely type a specific thing, eventually, given infinite time to type it. This is because when you throw infinites at probability, all probabilities tend to 1. Given an infinite amount of time, all things that can happen, will almost surely happen, eventually.
Almost surely, I'm quoting mathematicians. Because an infinite anything also includes events that exist but with probability zero. So, sure, the probability is 100% (more accurately, it tends to 1 as the number of monkeys approach infinite) but that doesn't mean it will occur. Just like 0% doesn't mean it won't, because, well, infinity.
Calculus is a bitch.
In typical statistical mathematician fashion, it's ambiguously “almost surely at least one”. Infinite is very large.
I used Mint for almost its entire existence so far, but recently I've started main driving immutables, and gotta say the experience is even more user friendly. That's my current experimentation stage but, so far, it doesn't feel experimental at all, it just works out the box, no issues.
The whole point is that one of the terms has to be infinite. But it also works with infinite number of monkeys, one will almost surely start typing Hamlet right away.
The interesting part is that has already happened, since an ape already typed Hamlet, we call him Shakespeare. But at the same time, monkeys aren't random letter generators, they are very intentional and conscious beings and not truly random at all.
It is not. Welcome to the fossil fuel dystopia.