I’d expected much more glass on this one too. If you’re underwater for fun you want to see shit!
I’d expected much more glass on this one too. If you’re underwater for fun you want to see shit!
With the minor difference that trekkies usually don’t kill people.
Great first date question!
You obviously don’t know how cults work. But that’s fine. I hope you’ll never lose a real friend to one.
If I had a friend who kept the company of fascists, I’d probably drop them real quick
Not a good way to make them see reason. I know it’s hypothetical but if you’re friends shouldn’t you put in some effort to help instead of just drop them?
Sometimes it’s great. If people complain about paywalls, for example, and you didn’t even see the pop-up.
While I actually do that, you cannot seriously recommend it to anyone. Hardly any site works without Javascript nowadays.
I thought that was the whole joke here.
It’s 6.2 GHz and they set the voltage to 1.85 V. Both is stated in the article. You must have missed it.
Just because software vendors legally made it that way doesn’t make it right. Also probably the main reason, many people don’t have any qualms pirating.
if you were spoon-fed a certain religion as a child
And if you weren’t? Probably hard to believe for most Americans but atheism isn’t an invention of the current generations.
And tidal forces. ;)
And yeah, it’s probably hard to find volunteers to get spaghettified. And they also won’t report back.
spaghetti faction no title forces
That just gotta be intended.
can you give me a like, more clear practical example of a good use of blockchain?
Do you see how all the answers are generic, tend to be long and read like a sales pitch? That’s because the actual answer is: no, there is no practical legal application that isn’t better solved with conventional tech.
The only application that is successfully used in practice is paying for organized crime: buying goods and services on the dark web and paying for extortion like ransomware attacks.
Now add that trustlessness is impossible and you can scratch the blockchain box for good.
You cannot get rid of trust in some form. You need entry to the system, so you need to trust its gateway. You need to trust the network to not have some vulnerability like a 50% attack. And eventually you need to trust the developers not to add critical bugs (that alone is virtually impossible) or pull off some scam.
So, since you need to trust someone, might as well choose some government regulated party like a bank or a lawyer and choose conventional and efficient tech.
How about keeping the guard rails as they are and let the fat car drivers carry the risk?
I saw that here, too. Thought about reporting when I saw the sidebar didn’t even have a rule against it (forgot which community though - my app doesn’t present that in an obvious way)