Is it password1?
Is it password1?
Breeding mosquitoes should help attract them.
Most painful upvote of my life.
That’s because nobody helped when their hair was on fire, and now they’re dead.
I’m right there with you. Also, it’s “it’s” and not “its”.
It’s called Xitter now, pronounced shitter.
I refuse to think of 2000 as anything but the future where will all have flying cars.
Thanks for the suggestion. I’ve heard of it, but haven’t tried yet - but I will.
That comma in the title made me think they blame Iran for Trump.
I gave up on Google over a decade ago - maybe two decades by now. Way back when I was using Yahoo, Ask Jeeves, Astalavista, and others. When Google came, it somehow beat them all at finding exactly what I was looking for.
Later they stopped searching for the exact words you typed, but it was okay because adding a plus in front of terms, or quotes around phrases, still let you search exact things. The combination of both systems was very powerful.
And then plus and quotes stopped working. Boolean operators stopped working. Their documentation still says they work, but they don’t.
Now, it seems like your input is used only as a general guideline to pick whatever popular search is closest to what it thinks you meant. Exact words you typed are often nowhere in the page, not even in the source.
I only search Google maps now, and occasionally Google translate.
(b) will just lead to fewer up and down votes, i.e. less engagement. That in turn could lead to slowly bleeding out.
Exactly. LHC also didn’t find that breathing air is good for you. I’m still not going to stop.
I hear taking candy from them is easy too. I’m too scared to try though.
Personally I’d rather buy the slaves. And set them free of course. Yes, of course.
Our code base is filled with “//constructor”, “//destructor”, “//assignment”, or the ever enlightening “Foo GetFoo(); // GetFoo”.
This is not what they mean by self-documenting code.
If the Internet has taught me anything, they’re 42 and 69.
So it is indeed greener where you water. Try the body thing next and let us know.
I miss Windows phone, still the most intuitive phone UI I’ve ever seen.
There’s an old but IMO still very relevant white paper by Microsoft titled “So Long, And No Thanks for the Externalities: The Rational Rejection of Security Advice by Users”. It argues that security measures often cost more in employee time (and hence wages) than the potential benefit. It’s an interesting read and I think about it whenever our chief of security cooked up with another asinine security measure.
With a million dollars you can buy mushrooms, making picking them feel pointless.