Most men don’t.
The rule needs to be changed. Because it is just a rule. Or just call the senate into session, lock the doors, and start the process of manual confirmation without break until there are few enough republicans in the room to change the rule or they finish. I understand it would only take something like 2000 hours. Let them sit in session, continuously, until it’s done. The Ds just don’t have the balls to do it.
Somewhat ironic that the source material of the bulk of this "bust" is from a work that's IP is in the public domain.
I always assumed this would be possible, given that detonation, by definition, travels faster than sound in the base material.
The build quality of the Warthog is excellent, but the software pretty much requires you program for a living and are willing to spend a large fraction of your play time just chasing down bugs and incompatibilities (if you play under windows). Plus, the lack of yaw/twist on the stick is a non-starter - I sold mine for a VKB HOSAS. The quality/build is sufficient, I just can’t bring myself to bind a third control system in as many years, so I’m back to playing with the T.Flight I originally learned on.
Going VR for space combat is, imho, night and day better. I’ve tried wide screens and head tracking, but VR is just chef’s kiss. I can’t do road racing in vr though. No matter how good I think I’m doing in DiRT, there will come a point in the first hour when some movement hits me wrong and I throw off the headset, lay flat on the floor, and spend ten minutes praying I don’t heave. (Until then it’s awesome, of course). I’m still not sure why Space combat doesn’t throw me. Maybe there’s not enough visual cues from the stars to seem disconnected.
Always fascinating to see who's trying to tag whom with negative press in headlines. After reading the story, it has almost nothing to do with the Kuiper satellites. Amazon will be launching two satellites this week, one with active light-pollution mitigation to determine it's effectiveness compared to an unmitigated satellite. There are 3200 potential Kuiper satellites planned through 2029. OTOH...(FTFA):
"...SpaceX’s Starlink constellation, which is now nearly 4,800 strong" and "Starlink now comprises more than half of all satellites in orbit, and SpaceX is seeking regulatory approval for 30,000 more."
It's curious that the call-out in the title is for Kuiper, when their planned constellation is less than 10% of the satellites Starlink will have over the same near-term deployment period.
That's how I run mine, though I think I may have a 10 or 11 series i3. It idles just under 30W, which isn't too bad, and - though I don't have lots of users - never breaks 40, even during 4k transcodes, thanks to quicksync.
Indeed. There are too many humans by at least one order of magnitude. The only reason we need population growth is to perpetuate the capitalistic ponzi scheme government and corporations are running.
you cannot allow (a) free users (b) who can upload content
Remind us again how you are building something like Lemmy, which allows free users to upload content?
All indications point to Apple restricting background timeslices for programs to reduce available compute cycles. Keeping modern chips at top speed for processing in bursts and then sleeping is actually more power efficient than throttling and allowing continuous calculation ( https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/race-to-sleep ) At nominal TDP, the A17 will drain an iPhone 15 battery from 100% to 0% in under 3-4 hours, even with the radios and screen off. The only way it can usefully function is to be in sleep mode most of the time and some processes were getting more time slices than would allow that.
"Hey you haven't used these things in 30 years" is the perfect excuse when cleaning out the attic. I kept my dice, though; cold, dead hands and all that.
I suppose they're just not interesting enough to be considered coffee table books. I mean, I haven't looked at my (signed) Michael Whelan book in years, but that's not going anywhere. Ever. My wife got me that for my birthday one year - she does have her brilliant moments.
Of course, last year my daughter discovered RPG in college. sigh
When I worked in an office I’d head out to my car and lay the seat back for 15 minutes of shuteye.