What? No, they also took melatonin, duh
What? No, they also took melatonin, duh
Does this mean anything to the average user, or is this a very specific use case?
Well you’re clearly not 4 years old anyway.
Does installing the Proton BattlEye runtime do anything?
I don’t play many games that use it, but for Ark you have to install a separate BattlEye.
That’s like $17 worth of nuts in their breakfast
Definitely not him. It was on the main screen for sure, might have just been an uncredited cameo or someone else entirely.
Could have sworn I saw him in TNG with dots on his face or something.
I have no idea who I’m thinking of if it’s not him.
Wasn’t he also in an episode of TNG?
This is what we need AI for. Robots that can independantly handle this type of task that is too dangerous for humans.
Fuck the generative garbage we have now. Work on this stuff instead.
If you’re Taylor Swift, you can post wherever you want and most Swifties will follow.
I’ve had some issues with Linux, but none that I can attribute to Wayland.
a roast
Oh!
(comedic)
Oh.
The EcoTank models are built to be refilled from bottles. The ink is also much cheaper, and they can be used with dye sublimation ink if one wishes.
Their regular printers are shitty otherwise.
Totally optional features that come set up by default are not really optional unless they’re opt-in from the start. Most users are not savvy enough to figure out how to disable that kind of stuff.
Empress is the cracker.
I think most people aren’t even aware of the different forms of DRM and whether or not their games use them. For the majority of players, there’s no discernible impact to their experience so they have no reason to question any of it.
Nobody’s teaching these companies any lessons. They keep using Denuvo because it works, and the games keep selling because the number of people actually bothered by it is pretty small.
Texas judge rules on case before hearing case.
We all know where this is going.
So what about 3D printing? Currently, input shaping uses an accelerometer to calculate resonances and uses that data to adjust movement and reduce flaws in the printing process. For anyone with knowledge of both fields, would this allow a built-in or add-on accelerometer to be used in real time to compensate for momentum and resonances even further?