Uhhh… we don’t? If so I’m probably going to jail.
Uhhh… we don’t? If so I’m probably going to jail.
When switching from flux core wire to regular wire with shielding gas on my welder it calls to reverse the polarity of the electricity to the welding gun. You have to open it up and swap two wires around. It always cracks me up inside when I’m telling people I had to reverse the polarity of the welder to get a better weld.
I think we need to na*l down what we consider profanity.
It’s not piracy but the Internet Archive also has many books and textbooks. It’s legal and free. It saved me from buying a few books in university.
deleted by creator
Is it intentional? A fun idea but I doubt it myself. The people making the colouring book were likely in a different building or a different continent than the people who created the game.
I stuck Oracular Spectacular by MGMT into the CD player of my Miata (second car) when I bought it. I bought it in the winter when I couldn’t drive it so the album always brings me back to working on it.
I’d love to see water sprints of various depths.
On the upside the joystick still centers itself.
I wasn’t around then but i think the stories I heard was “kid wants his own cd player and gaming console so he buys a PS1”
I’ve heard stories of people buying or being encouraged to buy a PS1 because it also played CDs.
I was in for computer science major but took lots of other electives. The only course I needed Windows for was Windows App Programming. The rest I was fine with on Linux.
It’s better than on Reddit, which was usually justified by “it’s an American site”, but it’s definitely still here and annoying on Lemmy.world.
I’m not American and I’d love to have one of these.
Very interesting, I’ve never heard about this before.
Piper is a GUI wrapper for libratbag which supports a bunch of gaming mice that is great for customizing button mapping. It doesn’t do per-app basis but once you map the mouse buttons to regular keys/commands you could use another application to do the mapping per application.
There’s a few advantages. No server maintenance is one, but the main benefits are scalability and cost. Renting a server is expensive and is billed regardless of usage per month. Serverless is billed in 10 millisecond blocks so you only pay for each request essentially. Since it creates one compute function per request, it will more easily scale up to meet a surge of users. Of course with any trendy technology it can be misused to situations where it’s not a good fit and lose the cost and scalability benefits.
Serverless means you don’t have a server running 24/7 that’s sitting idle waiting for requests. When a user makes a request on a webpage/app it’ll run a short lived piece of code for a few dozen milliseconds then shuts off. No permanent “server” running. Of course there’s servers running the code to start that function and usually a permanent database server but the main app/website code is running on demand only.
The Stanley Parable doesn’t really have a genre, and I don’t think you make another entry into that genre without being derivative. There’s a couple games I can think of that have themes of player agency, Bioshock and to a lesser extent Spec Ops: The Line. Just some ramblings.
The popping sound is a feature, not a bug. How else can you tell if your toast is ready when you’re doing something else when getting ready in the morning?