installs Firefox LSR
(I am still very happy having made the switch to debian, although I would like to switch to plasma 6 at some point xD)
installs Firefox LSR
(I am still very happy having made the switch to debian, although I would like to switch to plasma 6 at some point xD)
Sure, Maybe you’ll get hooked again:
In case you actually needed a refresher:
I turns out that Buster killed Lucile (2).
I got tired of cooking and eat our a lot more nowadays, yes.
What do you mean after it ended?
Did you watch the last episode (Netflix, not the original) ?
Not for most duff you mentioned, but the adbreaks themselves:
Our old dvr enabled us to skip ads in the recorded tv programs pretty accuratley. It set chapter markings whenever an ad-block began/ended which it figured out by the frequency of hard cuts as ads have them between every ad (so multiple times a minute) whlie normal programming usually does not. This was way pre-AI (like late 00s). Sadly the built in dvrs in our tvs after that did not have that function, but maybe there is a modern implimentation somewhere.
The plastic box with plastic probably has a notable RF signal which can be traced?
You can still see which vpn you are using, which is likely the rout they’d go. That and going after the private VPN providers.
Just opened a PayPal account and their limit is 20. Plus the only 2fa option is sms 🙃.
Scaling does not include translation either yet it does here by your logic.
I don’t think that would safely work with pedestrians and cyclists.
Liverslushie
can anyone help me figure out, why the following shell script does not work:
#!/bin/bash
while IFS= read -d $'\0' -r "dir" ; do
dir=${dir:2};
echo "${dir}"\#;
cd "'""${dir}""'" ;
ls;
##doing something else
# cd ..;
done < <(find ./ -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d -print0)
I am running it in a location with a lots of folders containing spaces (think of it like this:
/location containing spaces# ls
'foo ba' 'baa foo ' 'tee pot'
I get errors of the following form:
script.sh: line 5: cd: 'baa foo ': No such file or directory
but when I manually enter cd 'baa foo'
it works fine.
Why could that be? (the echo retuns something like “foo baa #” .)
It really confuses me that the cd with the exact same string works when I enter it manually. I have allready tried leaving out the quotes in the cd command and escaping the spaces using dir=$(printf %q "${dir}");
before the cd but that did not work either.
tbh I am new to shell scripts so maybe there is something obvious I overlooked.
As one should!
Not cropped enough
than putting a single small motor on each carriage.
Why do modern passenger trains do just this then?
I think the aerodynamics you also mentiomed are the most important factor here.
Maybe a stupid question, but how do paid streaming services avoid that issue?