

I’d say it’s more that computers only enabled the opportunity for humans to invent the security problems that other humans now have to counter with better computer and human solutions.
I’d say it’s more that computers only enabled the opportunity for humans to invent the security problems that other humans now have to counter with better computer and human solutions.
Yeah, sure, bringing things back on prem where 90% of organizations do not have comparable resources in-house to manage and secure them, as opposed to leveraging a cloud provider and properly maintaining the shared responsibility model is going to “set us free”.
Don’t know about ‘battle royal’, but are you talking about Battlebit?
https://store.steampowered.com/app/671860/BattleBit_Remastered/
Or in the battle royale genre, there’s TAB:
https://store.steampowered.com/app/823130/Totally_Accurate_Battlegrounds/
If by “well maintained grass” you’re talking about a flat, maintained sports field or something of the sort, likely yes. If you mean grass that’s been cut but the ground is otherwise natural with bumps and holes, then you’ll probably have problems.
It does depend on the chair, but most are not built for off-roading. Also will depend on if you’re the pusher or if you’re talking about propelling yourself (as the wheelchair occupant).
But also know that understanding isn’t always going to bring resolution. Sometimes all you come to understand is that the people who raised you are, in actuality, thoroughly racist.
I wish I could find it easier to simply ignore my aging parents’ political views like I do with most acquaintances in the deep red state I live in, but I can’t.
The people who raised me to be kind and emphasize with others now base their worldview in fear and hatred. As far as I’m concerned my parents died sometime around 2016 (or perhaps before then), and there are some kind of racist pod people in their place.
Bullshit that only true bullshitters can spew.
No. Yes.
Find the non-twatty people in your life and ride out the rest of it.
I didn’t quite realize that, figured that when you were viewing another instances’ content it was loading from that instance. I guess that means that Lemmy content across all instances has loads of redundant copies.
Maybe I’m misinterpreting what you’re saying, but lemmy.one has basically no content on it other than the 8 communities that @jonah has created or allowed there. The whole point of that server is to allow people to simply login and then participate in other instances from there.
That is all to say, lemmy.one would be one of the “smaller” instances from a standpoint of content to be indexed by Google.
In St. Louis (e- and many other places apparently, didn’t know they were a larger chain) if you want Detroit style pizza, Jet’s is the place.
Ah, well then yeah he should have been more explicit, or simply not replied.
If the question asked was “do you agree to the contract?” and the farmer answered “👍”, then yeah I can see it. But if the question asked was “have you received the contract?”, then this ruling is bullshit. Unfortunately the article doesn’t have enough information either way.
To rephrase the question - If someone was looking over your shoulder at your Steam window, would they see the installed porn games in your library from your other account, even if the other account isn’t logged in?
How do you handle that in Steam itself though? Does it show games that other accounts have installed? Does it just not let you play those games unless you sign in as that account or are linked via family sharing?
It will always be strange to me why people use email apps on Windows. I haven’t willingly used a desktop email program since Yahoo mail was introduced back in the day (then on to Gmail, etc.)
What do people do with email that the web client isn’t enough?
(edit) - And just to add, OP check out Thunderbird, Mozilla’s (maker of Firefox) email client.
I mean, the sooner Squeenix wants my money, the sooner they’ll bring it out on Steam. If exclusivity deals are worth more to them than people buying the game, best of luck to them and I’ll buy their game several years from now when it’s on sale for less than $30.
People would sometimes “tag” it, but only insofar as adding it to the subject line of the post i.e. “[NSFL] - This person won a Darwin Award”. On reddit I always figured they didn’t add an explicit tag for it because then they’d be admitting that they hosted that kind of content, and reddit is ever increasingly concerned about its public image.
What you’re describing is “NSFW” (not safe for work) vs. “NSFL” (not safe for life). NSFL covers the spectrum of anything that could be considered potentially psychologically harmful to someone who’s not desensitized to such traumatic things - gore, death, etc. Anything beyond standard nudity / intercourse porn can possibly fall into the NSFL category. For that matter, things that aren’t strictly porn can still fall into NSFW, since what’s acceptable at some people’s work may be stricter than others.
Of course, all of that is dependent on the person submitting the content checking the right boxes. I do agree that the Lemmy devs need to add a NSFL tag to allow instances / communities who want to host such content to be able to delineate between that and NSFW.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/NSFL
https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=NSFL
“Good faith” = corporations screwing you
“Bad faith” = you screwing corporations
There, I’ve simplified it.