If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it’ll spend its life believing it’s a failure.
If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it’ll spend its life believing it’s a failure.
“most personal information”
And they just handed it over to some company.
americans at least don’t actually use those two phrases in conversation
Well now they’re gonna know!
The problem is slowing it down to any speed that would end up with it dropping into the sun is going to take more effort and be more difficult than firing it out of the solar system. It isn’t practical.
True. I’d wager a decent chunk of that urban sprawl is due to our massive parking lots.
Us Americans can’t seem to get the hang of a simple roundabout, so we’ve got that super efficient stop-and-go traffic.
Mawwiage is what bwings us togevah today.
One of my favorite movies that I’ll probably never watch again. The Kronos Quartet did an awesome job with the soundtrack.
The bronzer has likely seeped in and turned all the organs a disgusting orangish-brown.
Building your qualifications to teach advanced courses in being blasé?
Growing up in the south eastern US vending machines were a common sight in a number of public spaces, and they were completely fine. No idea what third-world parts of the country the rest of these people grew up in.
Even with JavaScript disabled, I’m only seeing the first paragraph of the article.
Unfortunately a dollar in cut costs is more valuable than employee talent these days.
Because that router will be broadcasting DHCP signals and offering IPs, conflicting with the authorized DHCP servers on the network. This wiki article will probably explain it better. I’m not so good with the words a such.
Here’s hoping these downvoters aren’t in charge of any networks. Not really sure what part of “a router is a DHCP server” you geniuses don’t understand.
Not all that surprising. I don’t know of any network manager who’d happily allow rogue routers on their network, particularly if you still have it configured as a DHCP device and not a pass through device, which most college students do not consider and will very much disrupt campus network performance.
Ah, so like the esports competitions for LoL and the like? That makes more sense. Thanks!
Thanks for the answer!
I know there’s no numbered fixed limit on the human eye, obviously, but it seems like beyond a certain screen refresh rate our eyes wouldn’t really notice a difference, yeah?
Is it really worth the cost after 144 Hz, though? Are there applications for a higher refresh rate than the human eye can even see?
Oh I do hope there are tentacles involved!