Wau, actually.
Wau, actually.
If you’re using xkb
, try this guide. Of course, backup any system files before modifying them, and just to be sure, add a 2nd keyboard layout as backup and know how to switch between them to have a fallback if you corrupt the primary one.
There might be TUI or GUI tools too, probably way more convenient for a one-off change on a single PC.
I just changed one of the existing layouts. Very easy in any text editor, you just need to find the proper name or Unicode code for each function/character.
Call them Li-Ion batteries to prevent confusion with lithium batteries such as CR-2032, which probably have been used in pagers.
Overloaded Li-Ion batteries don’t reliably explode. I would have expected them to place the explosive inside an oversized battery pouch along with a heating element in series with the battery. A microcontroller on the board could go short-circuit upon receiving a certain message, making a large current flow through the heating element and triggering the explosive.
Well, I’m guessing they concealed them in an extra-large Li-Ion battery and wired a heating element in series inside it, so that shorting the terminals by the circuitry triggered the explosive. Pagers use so little power that the lower capacity would be hard to notice and the heating element’s voltage drop would be negligible. I assume the pagers’ command & control equipment had backdoors, too.
They cannot just make a passive, universal device that presses places on the touchscreen, as Nintendo has filed a patent for a Game Boy case for phones, likely without actual interest in making this cheap hardware device themselves.
Well, then you’re going to hear
most of the time, much like Spotify.
(Last time I was in a Spotify-“enhanced” waiting room was 6 years ago so no idea if that still holds.)
The Ion launcher for TI-83 calculators has existed since 1999. Why did the Android port take so long? /s
Even regular people would borrow suits for photographs, or have one set for special occasions.
Finally implementing something pirates have taken for granted since the first digital cross-platform audio file format (1983?)
It’s a minix clone, so… mimix?
We should make a donation campaign, pretty sure somebody has a spare SATA drive around. This minix clone sounds good
I’m glad someone was able to donate a non-AT drive because Linus could not afford it :-(
I once found a workaround on a trashpicked Android 5.1 phone by Huawei. There was a shitty third-party keyboard during the setup, so I tapped around and found that it has DLC themes. Attempting to download one resulted in a popup “Offline? Check network settings” with a link into the Settings app, where I could set a lock screen passcode and then remove it, which nullified FRP.
Later, I found a YouTube video with instructions for another exploit, which somehow reached Settings via the screenshot shortcut and then attempting to share it via Gmail. I imagine weird phone brands will have several exploits like this.
Looks like a texture bug… Why would they bother modeling them if they’d end up using an obviously wrong texture?
They seriously thought doubling the CD’s read speed was going to bring it close to ROM cartridges?
It would be abhorrent for us to see photorealistic cat organs but I guess kids in The Simpsons’ universe are raised differently.
The other characters are quite perplexed about the idea of 3D, too, not just the stupid Homer. A scientist gives a brief lecture, similar to how scientists IRL introduce 4D.
Anyway, that answers the good old question “Is the gruesome cartoon Itchy & Scratchy photorealistic from the Simpson’s POV?”
French chicken: cot-cot-codet