Tunic
Sea of Stars
Tunic
Sea of Stars
They do. It’s called Nintendo Switch Online and is managed over a subscription service. They’re never going to just sell you a game anymore. They’re going to force you to pay monthly for it for the rest of your life.
They have inverse colored beards.
It’s pronounced Geez not Jeez
Best I can do is M. Night Shyamalan on Peacock
I can spend 2 minutes scanning a page for a certain word every time I need to search for something.
But I’m very happy somebody spent the time to code Ctrl+F.
Windows 10 and it’s not a good idea
STD: site-transferred data
Something something ground loop detection, maybe.
I’ve also used .local but .local could imply a local neighborhood. The word itself is based on “location”. Maybe a campus could be .local but the smaller networks would be .internal
Or, maybe they want to not confuse it with link-local or unique local addresses. Though, maybe all .internal networks should be using local (private) addresses?
I just recently started working with ImGui. Rewrite compiled game engines to add support for HDR into games that never supported it? Sure, easy. I can mod most games in an hour if not minutes.
Make the UI respond like any modern flexible-width UI in the past 15 years? It’s still taking me days. All of the ImGui documentation is hidden behind closed GitHub issues. Like, the expected user experience is to bash your head against something for hours, then submit your very specific issue and wait for the author to tell you what to do if you’re lucky, or link to another issue that vaguely resembles your issue.
I know some projects, WhatWG for one, follow the convention of, if something is unclear in the documentation, the issue does not get closed until that documentation gets updated so there’s no longer any ambiguity or lack of clarity.
My open-source, zero dependency JS library for requesting and generating certs with dns01: https://github.com/clshortfuse/acmejs
I only coded for name.com but it is compatible with anything really. Also can run in the browser, which could be useful in a pinch.
Nice riposte, OP.
When I document code I have this problem with indices vs indexes.
Nobody outside of Spain calls it like that:
https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q="Cafe+negro"%2C"Cafe+solo"
It’s “Café Negro” everywhere else