

Deleting accounts doesn’t mean the company deletes your data. Even under GDPR (Everyone else is completely SOL here, I believe), they can keep if it is required for their business, unless you explicitly demand a full deletion.
Deleting accounts doesn’t mean the company deletes your data. Even under GDPR (Everyone else is completely SOL here, I believe), they can keep if it is required for their business, unless you explicitly demand a full deletion.
Of you press up/down right after left/right the window will be a quarter of the screen instead of half.
On Windows 11, you can also just drag towards the top, and it’ll give you different snapping options.
I will argue that Witcher 3 did not have enough content for it’s own world. Don’t get me wrong, the content was great, but there’s large swathes of emptiness inbetween. The devs tried to fill it with map markers that got repetitive very quickly (hello, random floating barrels).
IMO, downscaling the world to 75% size and reducing the amount of non-quest content would have made the game better.
You can literally sort issues by last activity if you want to proritize based on that. There’s no reason to autoclose issues.
I would assume that they have more than six briefs in total.
Cars being online has some tangible benefits in that they can transmit location data to emergency services, especially if the driver is unresponsive. Might save someone from dying in a ditch in the middle of nowhere.
Arguably, some of the data collected while driving is also very useful for maintenance and development (e.g. if a lot of vehicles start having a similar issue after X miles).
That said, this data should be limited in scope and use (e.g. must not be sold, especially not to insurance companies), as well as anonymized as much as possible. Which is currently not the case, and that definitely needs regulation.
The trick with nicknames is using them in alphabetical order.
You can prefix the coordinates with the name of the current nearest star or center of galaxy.
Universal coordinates are fairly useless anyway, given how everything moves around in space.
Hey, don’t forget the Matlab people
I’m fond of ruff lately. Pretty much the same as black, but it just comes with the linter instead of being separate tools.
Just make another PR where you add formatter instructions to the readme and pyproject.toml.
Yes, this does nothing for game dev. But I don’t think it was supposed to.
The fact that this is a genAI Model generating a reasonable, context aware image a whopping 20 times a second is nonetheless pretty impressive.
The jupyter console is just a better version of the interactive shell. Great for just trying out some lines of code.
I also use notebooks at work to try out some APIs, to skip the tedium of the initial setup or some other routines.
That still leaves the microphone.
The actual simple and sane solution would just be to require indicator leds hardwired to the literal power supply lines of the camera chip/microphone, so they’re physically impossible top turn off while recording.
But that would require US or EU legislation.
John Powell’s opening for How to Train your Dragon deserves a shoutout for including every major Leitmotiv of the movie.
I’ll let someone smarter go into 18 minutes of more detail here: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4UUJQH7GLms
To be fair, the levelling mechanics in some ubisoft games (looking at you, AC origins) are complete garbage that do nothing but arbitrarily restrict your movement.
Still unsure why people would pay to skip them though.
Just like those 36 people he knifed.
With games taking place in both Mexico and Canada, does that make the entire US into flyover state?