

Mica is a Windows 11-exclusive visual material that adds a soft, blurred, and slightly transparent background to application windows. It’s part of Microsoft’s Fluent Design system and helps apps feel more native to the OS.
reject humanity, become toaster | she/they | experimenting with names
Mica is a Windows 11-exclusive visual material that adds a soft, blurred, and slightly transparent background to application windows. It’s part of Microsoft’s Fluent Design system and helps apps feel more native to the OS.
it does too many things, thus going against the unix philosopy of “do one thing and do it well”
Ich glaub bei Railjets könnte man Probleme wegen zu starken Druckwellen bekommen.
The companies should invest in some of those newfangled messaging capable phones then.
you can do “wifi sharing” which shares the phones wifi connection.
AI slop 👎
lots of styles like to open a chapter on the same side, so if the previous chapter is one page short, you pad it.
What are blue books and what’s so special about them?
Wien Meidling
Perhaps hetzner.com can meet your demands.
Generally, no. Apt gets its packages from the repositories, so unless (i) your .deb package gets added to those repositories, or (ii) you add a new repository that contains your package, it won’t be updated.
I am no expert, but I think it depends on how present those are in the training data. If you have barely any representation, I wouldn’t be surprised if the LLM thinks it is ome if the parent languages instead.
In this case, I believe there is a container right outside the door.
Regardless, you can’t just leave your trash wherever you want.
Yes, by self-service I mean an automated lockerbox. What you see in the picture is when people retrieve their parcel from the lockerbox, rip it open, and just leave the cardboard box there.
Echt he
You can send and receive parcels at any time you like without them being stolen from your doorstep, and it helps to reduce the workload of the understaffed counter.
Diese Kommentarsektion ist nun Eigentum der Republik Österreich.
Indeed, but i fear neither the employees nor the police would be particularly motivated to do that, probably.
This is in Austria, but yes, your point stands.
I guess it is either some company or political party