What is the <-->
port for? HTML? I thought that was port 80 or 443...
ChaoticNeutralCzech
Doubling every week means an interest rate of almost 5 × 10^17^ %. That can barely offset the ruble's inflation.
There is an API you can use with pythorhead
or other libraries to schedule posts very easily. @MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz uses it to automate loads of posts from his pic collections in local storage, and will gladly provide you with source code and assistance.
It's an LLM, for fuck's sake. Are they just going after buzzwords? I don't want to talk with the car about what the best (paying most for Google Maps placement) pizzeria around is, I'll decide that before the cab arrives. Just let me pick the address or coordinates in the app and shut up.
Yeah, I only realized that once you posted it.
I can pay two duodecillion tokens in a cryptocurrency I just made up. It is on track to overtake the ruble eventually!
And LGBT+ people (who are also overrepresented in brothels)
(That is a statement of fact, not judgement)
One of these values is yearly and real, the other one will crash if he attempts to make it liquid.
Someone should make a qBittorrent plugin that adjusts a torrent's speed limit continuously to draw shapes on the other peer's speed chart for one-on-one transfers. Ideally, so that the curve peak is your bandwidth and the area under the curve is the total data volume of the transfer. I would totally waste half of my bandwidth for a chance of amusing some leecher. (The other half can in the meantime be used for torrents with larger swarms)
Numbers are down, release the waifu! Common business strategy with ancient roots.
Rearrange, not rescale, which would be neccessary for a non-multiple-of-8 tile size. I originally thought it was ¾ size (12×12), which would need to shift graphics data to cram 2 virtual tiles into 3 physical ones. Of course, scaling would also look terrible, everything needs to be hand-drawn.
It's a joke, note the conflation of port (physical connector) and port (one of 65536 virtual TCP/UDP pathways for applications). Also, HTTP(S) (port 80 or 443 by default) is literally "Hypertext Transfer Protocol" so it's fair to say it was designed to carry HTML.