So as not to distract from the pretty things.
So as not to distract from the pretty things.
Broadly, and without evidence:
Women in formal situations were decoration, another piece of fashion attached to a man.
Edit: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Male_Renunciation
Pickling the onion
All our vowels are just “u” (or schwa as I was once told).
I bought a refurbished SFF PC and put a PCIe NIC in it. Installed opnSense.
Cheap as chips. Supremely powerful.
Why the fuck is the non execute setting, a principal safety feature, restricted to the pro and ent versions!?
Fuck you Microsoft.
Yeah, I went and checked after posting.
My hunch is that if the moon was closer it would ‘drag’ the barycentre closer to the moon.
Which, given the moon is slowly receeding, means it was probably a binary early on in the formation of the solar system.
That’s because you’ve only named one end of the tunnel. It’s the Mouth-Butt Tunnel.
Did you just assume drag’s person? /Jk
It doesn’t make sense to go 3rd person
It does if one wants to be really annoying.
Heights, depths; but not consistently.
After considerable reflection, I realised that a lack of a margin for error is what truly terrifies me.
You should definitely never ever watch The Fourth Kind.
“Oh, you must be thinking of my grandfather, we have the same birthday”
I believe the rule of thumb is binary planets’ barycentre is external to either body. This is the case with Pluto/Charon, I think it’s also the case with Earth/Moon.
Another bullshit passive-voice headline. Written implying the fault was not with the LAPD.
“LAPD officers destroy MRI machine in bungled pot raid”
Anxiety?
If that tiny idiot of an amygdala in your brain thinks you’re in danger then nausea can be a symptom.
February isn’t in summer.
Yeah, it is.
I still double-check my CIDR’s/netmasks and expected ranges with a tool (some online one or other). Easier to avoid silly mistakes or typo’s
TL;DR: it depends entirely on the DHCP server software.
Generally the safe/reliable policy is to assign a smaller DHCP range (or ranges) and allocate static assignments outside of the DHCP range(s).
Assume your network is 192.168.1.0/24.
Specify 192.168.1.128/25 for DHCP, which means all DHCP addresses will be above 192.168.1.128.
This leaves you everything below 192.168.1.127 for static assignments.
Two nightmares from when I was a child: