

Welcome to Lemmy! Love the post and I look forward to more, just one small suggestion. The title reads a little bit spamlike, I almost dismissed the post as some sort of ad.
Welcome to Lemmy! Love the post and I look forward to more, just one small suggestion. The title reads a little bit spamlike, I almost dismissed the post as some sort of ad.
That headline is pretty confusing if you only know Don Ho as a Hawaiian singer.
They literally exist right now.
M-Discs are not like standard Blu-rays, they were designed specifically for long-term archive storage. If you follow the link at the top of this thread you can get some more detailed information on them. They’re supposed to last several hundred years, but of course no one has empirical evidence of that yet.
The cruelty is the point.
I’m guessing 1 out of 10 respondents didn’t understand the question.
I assume he’s including himself in “tech leaders”.
Nope, definitely Princess Donut, glasses and all.
Annyeong.
Not reading the title either, I guess.
May I mambo dogface to the banana patch?
Several years ago I had a client who needed to be able to receive files from a client of theirs. This was before Dropbox and the like, so I just went in and set up a quick and dirty FTP server. Worked fine, client got their files, all was good with the world.
A couple weeks later: “hey, we have another client that needs to send us files, can you set them up on the FTP?” Sure, no problem.
Repeat for about the next six months. The thing turned into this huge glob of a mess that miraculously enough still worked.
Finally, I call up my contact there and tell him if he wants this to be a permanent solution we should go in and set it up right, and to do that I’m going to need a bunch of information from him, who needs access to what, who should not be able to access what, etc. He says fine, why don’t you come on over and we’ll hash it all out.
I go on-site, we end up having a 2-hour meeting (billed, of course) where we go over all this stuff, plenty of notes are taken, decisions are made. We wrap up, I tell him all I need now is the list of users and their access needs and I can clean the whole thing up.
I never got the list. The thing just continued to grow and grow into some kind of unearthly abomination. Fortunately, I left that job before the thing imploded completely. Someone else got to untangle that mess.
Those companies paid to have their buttons on the remote. Your TV manufacturer is not going to threaten their sponsorship deal by letting you use those buttons for anything else.
Not when Elon can sue companies into continuing to advertise on Twitter.
Found it, thanks!
Where would I find that setting? I have an S22 Ultra and I can’t seem to find it. Unless my phone has fallen out of support…
The question has been answered, but How Stuff Works has a good article which goes into detail.
I once had a client who didn’t want to buy new Office licenses for their brand-new Server 2008 terminal server, so had us install an old copy of Office 97 they had lying around. Surprisingly, it worked.
Looks like polydactyly to me, which is not uncommon in cats.