You’d never get it there if you don’t retard the timing on the fire truck’s motor.
You’d never get it there if you don’t retard the timing on the fire truck’s motor.
Also you press the clutch pedal a lot harder and quicker than the brake pedal so you really slam it.
It hit the extra wide brake pedal instead of the non-existent clutch pedal.
I just chose a number haha. That makes it much more feasible then.
Once a minute, and only if the screen contents change. I imagine there’s something lightweight enough.
Here for all the comments giving corrections.
That’s not the worst idea ever. Say a screenshot is 10 mb. 10x60x 8 hours =4800mb per work day. 30 days is 150gb worst case scenario. I suppose you could check the previous screenshot and if it’s the same, then don’t write a new file. Combine that with OCR and a utility to scroll forward and backward through time, it might be a useful tool.
When the cheese has a wake up 6 hours later with no balls in it.
How many working wrists do you need?
Coworker lore
I’ve never heard of such a chair. They don’t look particularly comfortable, at least the one without padding.
That’s wild. I suppose there’s lots of outdated print media with all these email addresses that never gets checked if it’s out of date.
It’s an error, since no amounts of zeros, even infinite, would make it equal 10.
Pirate sea shanties are booming
Ubuntu has had all three of those things. Amazon ads in the search bar was awhile back. Not sure but I assume they still hijack installing Firefox using apt and instead install it using snap. And Ubuntu Pro popups are a new thing.
What would it look like? I’d guess Amazon ads in the search bar, proprietary package managers overriding the old open package manager, and popup ads for distribution Pro?
Wait…
Web developer, couldn’t go without three monitors. Just three 1080p panels. Center monitor has the code editor, right has the browser, and left has the ticket or designs or the music player or Slack.
It’s been a minute since I used C/Cpp but if you compile with debugging symbols and using gdb give you info like in Java? At least the location of the crash.
But who uses that? I recall using a gnome plugin a few years ago that required an Open weather API key that you could use any location for.