Sense of "adjust (a clock, etc.) with reference to a standard of accuracy" is by 1660s. Related: Regulated; regulating.
Did you read your own source? Or just stop at the first sentence?
Sense of "adjust (a clock, etc.) with reference to a standard of accuracy" is by 1660s. Related: Regulated; regulating.
Did you read your own source? Or just stop at the first sentence?
Not UNIX-like, iOS is real UNIX.
Like how else would you get like a bike rack or a garden for your building?
You ask the owner, and then accept it will never happen.
They started in 1959, and are from Iowa. K&G is okay, but Maverick is far better in every way.
What do you mean exactly? Nearly every house in Colorado has a basement.
2019 is 96w charger. 140w is 2021 or later.
Yes, the THREE-trillion dollar, 50-year-old company that figuratively just prints money is going to become so desperate that they will abandon their extremely profitable business model to become… an ad agency?
The absolutely irrelevant reference to a vague PR line in Googles old corporate code of conduct was a nice touch, though
It’s, as you said, because it mounts everything as root. It’s possible that this could be exploited to gain root privileges but not likely. If you’re paranoid and/or building a secure system that you don’t need to dual boot, it’s not a bad idea to disable it.
Maybe Wartales would work for you.
It’s a really good RPG, lots of content and customization so every game is different, your choices matter, and supports up to 4-player co-op. It’s fairly similar to TTRPGs in a lot of ways.
If it is an actual USB headset, yes, an adapter will work fine. If it’s an analog headset with a USB-C plug then no. Outside of some phone headsets you should be fine as “audio accessory mode” isn’t super common outside of that.
It’s somewhat pedantic, but the point is really that, in our legal system you are innocent until proven guilty. It’s also the morally correct approach in a lot of ways outside of the legal system.
I used to play Faery Tale Adventure on Amiga. The anti-piracy was code phrases around the edge of a paper map.