This is Rust. You don’t need a safe word - safe is the default. You need an unsafe
word instead.
This is Rust. You don’t need a safe word - safe is the default. You need an unsafe
word instead.
What do you mean by “improving”? This alarming warning appears because Firefox requires permissions. Let us look at the permissions listed there:
App permissions should not be about “this app cannot be trusted because it asks for scary scary permissions”. They should be about “take a look at the list of permissions the app requests and determine whether or not it make sense for such an app to need such permissions”.
Controversial opinion: attempted murder is a serious deal regardless of whether or not it’s a hate crime.
Nearly every app should have a warning
No. If you put a warning on every app (except for the most trivial ones that don’t actually do anything useful) then the warnings mean nothing. The become something more than ass-covering legal(ish) BS.
The humans’ bathroom.
We’re going towards a dystopia…?
I mean…
Not with that kind of attitude!
Travel is never a matter of money but of bidet.
No. They’ll integrate with Threads.
I’ll start using it after I migrate to Wayland.
Do you have a cropped tattoo? Can we see it?
Pretty sure that was a joke…
The dog was clearly resisting arrest!
I had one in my mind for quite a while now. Time to write it down:
A famous-but-secretive order of women pulls the strings of all known civilization. They possess special powers, that allows them to do so, but even more than their powers they rely on their reputation and their vast network of connections. There is an important in-lore reason why the order accepts only women - the powers they use are defined by their gender, and the male version has some terrible aspects to it such that letting a man connect to it will be disastrous.
And yet - the order has a prophecy about a chosen one - a man that will use the power to unify humanity and lead it. For generations, the order’s secret agenda was to track the bloodlines that will lead to his birth, all in order to ensure he is born under their control and guidance.
But as stories go - that doesn’t work out. In the last generation, just before the chosen one is born, a member of the order betrays that goal. The chosen one is born outside the order’s control (though not entirely outside its influence), and grows up training under a master swordsman.
We reach the first book. Boy leaves happily with his big happy community - which, of course, gets attacked and destroyed. Accompanied by a member of the order he manages to escape the massacre , and eventually reach the desert. There they meet up with the Bedouin themed desert nomads. These nomad are very isolated and xenophobic, but of course they eventually accept our protagonist. We learn a few things about them:
Well, chosen one or not - there is a tradition to be held. So our protagonist goes through their tests, becomes their great chieftain, takes a chieftain’s daughter as his lover (which won’t stop him from marrying a more conventional princess), and goes on to use them to do his chosen one business and take over the entire civilization.
Hey, at least it’s not ads?
if date.today() - RELEASE_DATE > timedelta(days=90):
try:
game.prompt_user_to_connect_3rd_party_account()
except PlayerRefusal:
sys.exit(0)
Swords clash with other swords. Swords were always gay.