If this image were on the newspaper 10 years ago, ~~I would be amazed at the image quality. But that's not the point.~~
I would think they were being treated as criminals for using Linux (blurry faces and all).
ulterno
Nice idea, using 2 batteries instead of one. Now to see if it can be hot-swappable
There's always W.H.O. ORS
Be careful though: Some of them are so tasty, you might end up overdosed, with kidney pains.
Instructions unclear.
Ate the K and Mg pieces that the Chemistry teacher freshly sliced.
Last time I remember, it was a Swiggy driver. Those are infamous for not caring about traffic rules. Probably not much about their lives either.
The chap would have cut the light himself, if it were not for the police car nearby.
I went, "Ooh! That's some ingenuity!" and , both at the same time.
Wasting the ingenuity for this stuff.
What is an si (I presume session id)?
And where do look, if there is a standard for these thingies?
I understand that these are query strings, but who decides which keys are there and what they mean? And if they depend completely on the server's implementation, then how do you know what the "si" key means, except from experience?
Thanks in advance.
but I’ve learned my lesson
To use git blame
before calling out the moronity, or to not use git
?
what moron wrote this?
*runs* git blame
It was bloody me!
Would you be talking about plates, spoons and such, when saying, "kitchenware"?
Because I don't see something like a wok having a heavy metal being sealed behind something else, since the surface needs to be some metal anyway and I don't know of any transparent metals.
On another note, I recently got gifted a melamine crockery set, by the company. And since this is a product that could easily be problematic if the manufacturing process were not perfect (and I don't see the company not cheaping out), I only use the stuff for keeping peels and other waste, before throwing it out.
Interesting.
Wouldn't it have been better to have the manufacturer state the amounts? That way, you just need to read the fine print. Like one does for food products.
Realised after reading this, that they had opened Steam.
And here I was thinking it was something Academic (it was Akademic).
So, Undertale types out "Linux", for some reason?