Most consumers are familiar with the 802.11 standards
Lol, no. Not in any way.
Most consumers are familiar with the 802.11 standards
Lol, no. Not in any way.
Definitely not new. However, in many practical applications you can sorta kinda ignore it (but definitely not all!).
Just testing how deep Cunninghams law will go haha
Nono, these are d orbitals. Although p orbitals are equally silly.
Anyone have an recent example of FDC Willard being thanked in a paper? I couldn’t find any, sadly
I found 2, but I am sure there are more. https://masto.host/ https://toot.io/mastodon_hosting.html
Wikipedia actually has an article about it. They are mainly bothered by the unreadability of it. Editors can indeed bundle citations as you suggest, but it takes some manual effort.
Citation overkill is also a bit of a red flag for edit wars, or barely-notable things that someone really wants to have on a wiki page.
Uhh, yes they do. This does not take much googling to find out. Capitalist companies produce spices in the east too.
Nono, the other way round. Visit it with chrome and spoof a firefox user agent, so it looks like you used firefox, while you can still use the website.
They will shame you, for your messy code. People suck sometimes.
Moissanite is chemically different to diamond (SiC vs C), has a different crystal structure, and is less hard. You can also get actual lab-grown diamond, but they are quite expensive. But you probabaly won’t be able to tell the difference anyway.
For the lazy: “The oldest surviving torrent we have seen is a copy of the Matrix fan film “The Fanimatrix”.”
Oops, yup, very true, I always confuse the Greek and Roman gods 😅
Just because I was curious: Sony comes from sonos, sound in Latin. Nike is the Roman Greek God of victory. Lego is is a Danish abreviation for “play well”. Cisco comes from San Fransisco. Adobe is the name of a Creek near the founders house.
I mean, yeah, basically. It’s really not very complicated.
When doing stuff, my grandfather would sometimes say:
“Even small things help”, said the fly, and she pissed into the sea.
Always made me laugh.
German also does this. I think a good 20% of all verbs are just variations of “ziehen” (to pull).
No (or very limited) editing in Okular…
It is nice, but not e-ink