That kind of sucks, but it should only be for a dev release
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp-data/-/blob/main/images/splash-log.md
That kind of sucks, but it should only be for a dev release
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gimp-data/-/blob/main/images/splash-log.md
K9 and Thunderbird for Android are now the same app with different branding
Not quite, they are and will continue to be the same app and code base with distinct branding.
The rebranding in F-droid recently was a mistake that has been fixed.
Interesting to see how different that is from Australia. In your example only lane 3 is a passing lane, and “undertaking” isn’t a thing, it’s completely legal to overtake in any lane.
Now do the crappy mobile games
The removals also follow former Netflix gaming boss Mike Verdu — who just announced that he’s a VP of “GenAI for Games” at Netflix — telling Game File’s Stephen Totilo that the company wasn’t building interactive titles anymore.
VP of “GenAI for Games”
Oh. Oh no.
successfully clipped a gravel as big as 5 millimeters
Okay
(2 inches)
…what?
the size of a tiny granola bit
…what??
He’s not naked, he’s wearing glasses
I reckon that requires a legislative solution, not just a technological one.
What do the exclamation points mean?
Two of the “questions” are just statements
Unpaid Open Source developers will have trouble fulfilling increasing government requirements, for example the EU Cyber Security Act.
Emerging companies like Tidelift, which pay developers, will solve the current problems of Open Source.
Open Source Software follows the Open Source Definition, while Free Software follows the Free Software Definition.
They have heavy overlap, one is not a subset of the other, and they are similarly restrictive, just shepherded by different groups. I’m sure there are licences that satisfy one but not the other, but they would have to be few and far between; just reading through each it’s not obvious how one could satisfy only one definition.
If I read that right, the normal way. It’s not a special lock, just the normal lock screen. The use case seems to be addressing the idea of your phone being snatched while unlocked, and then attempted brute forcing into apps with sensitive data pin/biometric locks
What thing called turtle are you referring to?
You would be giving up some feed-rate control and retraction. Probably not too bad with certain materials and large scale prints, but I’d be surprised if you could do anything moderately precise with this.
Note to studios: there is no amount of potential, unrealised profit that makes it ethical to install malware on another person’s computer.
They kind of exist in the form of car fridges
These guys are Canadian and I’ve always thought their tech seemed really creative and novel
It’s a little lower in the article