Maybe Thriftbooks? They do offer shipping to Canada but it’s not always cheap.
likes: food, programming, traveling, physics
Maybe Thriftbooks? They do offer shipping to Canada but it’s not always cheap.
I use it all the time to help simplify long excerpts, giving me an introductory gist of what something says.
You could write C or assembly and it would be compiled to something that would run on an embedded chip. They may or may not be running an RTOS.
Most of the embedded world uses those.
These would be great for backups if they’re cheap enough.
Somebody correct me if I’m wrong, but I don’t think Yuzu has any proprietary code. Folks have to go to other websites to download the Switch firmware and keys needed to play games.
Here in Seattle, the main scary natural disasters are earthquakes. We haven’t had a major one since 2001 or so, but supposedly there’s a massive one coming relatively soon.
Two things can be bad and you can discuss both of them. Let’s not lose our sights on something because something else is worse.
I don’t think it’s very useful at generating good code or answering anything about most libraries, but I’ve found it to be helpful answering specific JS/TS questions.
The MDN version is also pretty great too. I’ve never done a Firefox extension before and MDN Plus was surprisingly helpful at explaining the limitations on mobile. Only downside is it’s limited to 5 free prompts/day.
“is it a proper noun”: 🤷♂️
“are there multiple of this”: 👎
You can (could?) get Thinkpads with Ubuntu preinstalled.
I think there’s an update with that but I’m not entirely sure.
Here’s some things Lemmy could potentially implement:
…such as?
I’ve had Ziply Fiber before (but not 50 Gbps) and would max their upload for months and they didn’t even bat an eye. It’s the only ISP that I would ever recommend.
If you had really slow Internet, like smoke signals or semaphores across a nation, you could characterize it as millibit:
1 bit over 1000 seconds = 1 millibit/s.
But yeah, it’s basically meaningless in today’s age for Internet speeds.
I remember in 2013 building software for HMIs running WinCE and back then, it was horribly outdated and a trudge to work on. I can’t imagine how bad it would be today.
In college, I used to drink Starbucks’ Via. That instant coffee hits different.
Nowadays, I make either an espresso or a pour over. But I still crave Vias sometimes.
I’d argue it depends on who is serving it and what their intentions are. I don’t think it’s necessarily bad. I went to a local Juneteenth celebration and the food stands were serving some fried chicken, collard greens, jollof rice, etc.