This reminds me of a great video about this sort of principle in reverse: https://youtu.be/wBBnfu8N_J0
This reminds me of a great video about this sort of principle in reverse: https://youtu.be/wBBnfu8N_J0
It’s different in different markets. In Australia and New Zealand it’s usually a reasonably well made medium-dark blend.
You’ll get much better at any dedicated café, but it’s also miles better than sbux (who don’t even use real espresso machines).
I enjoy OpenMW and I’m happy to host if you want, although my instance is basically just me and a few friends right now.
Yeah, I’m not justifying the annexation.
Technically only some of HK was under the lease, some was indefinitely controlled by the British. However, you’re still right because of the military force difference.
You need everyone else in the EU to agree to remove them. Poland and Hungary sort of protect each other from EU consequences.
Manjaro and Antergos are just asking for trouble. If you want Arch, use Arch. Otherwise Ubuntu, Debian, Linux Mint, and Fedora are popular.
I don’t think the full Radeon suite is on Linux but there are tools for screen recording like simple screen recorder and OBS.
There is lots of 3rd party software available on all of these distros in their respective package managers, but Ubuntu has the advantage with PPAs allowing for more 3rd party repos to be easily added to the package manager.
HDR support is still very early/basic right now: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/HDR_monitor_support
I don’t think the RF can count as a direct successor state when Ukraine was also a member of the USSR.
The UN has not resolved that the Russian Federation is the Soviet Union w.r.t. veto powers. It’s just been assumed. For the PRC there was an actual vote.
Ukraine legally has just as much of a right to the Soviet Union veto.
Couldn’t the general assembly just acknowledge that the RF does not inherit the Soviet Union veto? Same way that they stripped Taiwan of their veto. I don’t think that would require a security council vote.
Wow another coup in francophone Africa. I wonder if the regional democratic powers not intervening in Niger encouraged this.
Oh wow, this is tragic
This article does not claim otherwise.
Two things can be bad at the same time.
here you go: !slackware@lemmy.ml
The official government guidance discusses that. It’s illegal to charge for weight of packaging under the weights and measures act, so they’re encouraged to program in known-bags and empty/tare customer provided bags.
It uses other signals too, like what other sites you’ve visited with that checkbox on it, what CloudFlare has seen your IP address doing in the past, etc.
The google one is able to see if you’re logged into a google account and take that into account.
There’s even a new variant of the Google captcha that is invisible and doesn’t even bother to show a checkbox.