I can’t imagine it’s going to be very long before Elon’s hostile attitude toward basic safety results in a high-profile catastrophy involving human deaths under the ospices of Space X.
I can’t imagine it’s going to be very long before Elon’s hostile attitude toward basic safety results in a high-profile catastrophy involving human deaths under the ospices of Space X.
I’ll take the grape ones if you don’t want them.
Particularly Pixie Stix. Grape’s the best flavor of those.
Jesus told me it doesn’t have to be alcohol. He once turned piss into Mtn Dew. I’ve only ever done the opposite.
I smell a business opportunity.
I’m disappointed “hunter2” isn’t on the list.
“Have?”
If by “we” you mean humans, we only “have” one planet. And it’s habitable for now.
Aside from Earth, we have found some that might have liquid water, an oxygen-rich atmosphere, a relatively-close-to-Earth gravitational acceleration on its surface. But there’s no real likelihood that we’ll ever be able to get to any of those… like… ever. And I’d think probably even those would require some teraforming to be habitable.
I think what you’re talking about is called a “LAN”/“Local Area Network”.
Honestly, this isn’t much of a hypothetical for me. At work, my choices are Windows, Mac, or Ubuntu. I’m quite happy with Ubuntu, though I’ve switched away from the default desktop environment to i3.
I use Arch (BTW) on my personal systems. And Ubuntu isn’t as bad as I worried it would be.
My main gripe is snaps. Firefox is practically unusable as a snap. And my employer forbids installing any software (save for a select list of exceptions) not via the officially-supported Ubuntu way of doing things. Chrome is available without snap, so I use it on my work machine. Which annoys me, but if I’m less efficient in my job as a result, it’s their own fault.
Stahp I just watched a 2-hour video analysis of liminal spaces I can only get so hauntological
Honestly, “browser engine” and “lightweight” currently don’t belong in the same sentence. Unless you’re going for something with very little functionality compared to Webkit or Gecko or whatever. We can hope that changes with time, but I don’t think there are a lot of prospects.
As far as “little functionality” options, there’s the Dillo browser. I’m not sure its engine is really easily “seperable”, so to do so might be some work. It’s surprisingly maintained. Its latest release is from 3 months ago. It’s definitely extremely lightweight. (Unless you’re comparing it against, say, elinks or something.)
As for somewhat promising projects that are not yet anywhere near ready for prime time, there’s the Ladybird browser. Again, I don’t know how seperable the engine is. And I don’t know how lightweight this one is either.
Pain at the injection site, of course. (I got the Moderna shot this time. Most of the COVID shots I’ve gotten were Pfizer and man were they the most painful vaccinations of any sort I’d ever had for the longest. Moderna is nowhere near as bad, but still a little worse than the flu.) Aside from that, I didn’t notice anything, really.
Already done. Less than two weeks ago, though.
And how much are you asking for in research funding?
Hey, everyone, look at this meme I found:
planetary, planetary, intergalactic
But seriously, even so, I think it’d be reasonable to still have per-galaxy navigation systems.
Probably arbitrarily one of the two vectors perpendicular to the plane of the Milky Way? (Assuming it wasn’t necessary for this navigation system to work outside of our galaxy.)
Behold, an AI that can feel distress:
if input("Should I feel distressed? ").lower() == "yes":
print("😰")
else:
print("🙂")
Iphone gives less opportunity for user “ownership” of our devices.
But I doubt there are many people who haven’t made personal sacrifices for loved ones.
Did people think they meant something else? Or was it more that they didn’t really elaborate and folks didn’t know quite what they meant?