how about jekyll? Lots of customization available.
l_b_i
Reddit believes in ~~an open~~ pay to access internet, but not the ~~mis~~use of ~~public content~~ our content we didn't make.
A few possibilities,
- brave has state in the past they use the googlebot user agent, if all reddit does is check the useragnet, it won't block brave. This does however mean brave is violating the robots.txt file.
- I saw some mentions of google fall back, I don't know if they still do it, but that could be another possibility.
- Brave ignores robots.txt files
- Brave paid for access
No matter the reason, well behaving crawlers will no longer crawl reddit, Everything is disallowed in the robots.txt
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
reddit recently updated their robots.txt to disallow all crawlers Google paid a bunch of money to have access to crawl reddit
You'll still see old stuff, but crawlers that care about robots.txt will get no new information.
That reddit filter will have less than an effect than it used to. Reddit blocked all crawlers except google.
I don't have an answer for you, I pay way too much from a local tea shop, but you might get better suggestions with answers to the following
- Hot or cold
- what type(s), herbal, black, mate, loose, bag...
- what do you like
- what do you not like
- flavor or plain
Partial rebuttal. If you increase the power draw, you need more pins dedicated to power and ground. Without reducing functions, this needs a different footprint. They have had issues with some CPUs in the past. bugs in complex systems are basically unavoidable, its just in hardware you can't just issue a software patch to fix it 100% with no negative effects.
Nvidia has been anti-competitive as long as I can remember. They put out dev tools that basically break games on AMD. That's just their operating model. I don't know that that's enshittifying as it often makes their own product better, its just being an anti-competitive ass.
I can't comment too much to your other points. I think some of the memory was down to the memory chip makers, not the product makers, but I can't back that up.
You might not like the prices, but computer components, cpu, gpu, motherboard.. keep getting better each generation, some bugs cause issues, but that's due to trying to maximize performance, not cheeping out. 3-d printer tech. In fact, thinking about it, a lot of competitive products keep their quality. Also small brand premium products in general.
RF only has 2 components, Phase (frequency) and its amplitude. For Analog FM radio, you have a center frequency you tune to. The variance from the center frequency (phase) is the amplitude of the carried signal. For digital signals, you will have specified offsets from the center that represent specific binary codes.
Edit: as others have said, the tuning and demodulating are 2 different steps. Step 1 tune, When you tune you take the signal centered at the carrier, what the dial on your radio says, and recenter it at 0. Step 1 is the same for pretty much everything RF. The output is "base-band". You aren't going in and out of tune because for each center frequency, there will be an agreed variance (band width) allowed for the channel. The tuner captures this entire range and this is what is then demodulated in step 2.
Not my area of expertise, but these are my thoughts on the subject.
If you want mechanical clips on the connector assembly itself, you are probably going to want to stay away from mezzanine or back plane connectors. I usually associate these larger mechanical standards where the card itself has the mechanical fastening with screws, either to a chassis (backplane) or to the other board (mezzanine). You'll probably find more luck with edge connectors, but that looks like another beast.
You also need to make sure you use something designed for multiple cycles if you plan on swapping frequently.
If I was looking for something I would just brows samtech, molex, or just digikey and filter until I find something that suites my needs.
For hot swap, you also have to make sure you have something that is designed for that, usually that means some longer pins on ground to make sure you're not having any surges on data lines.
From the last eclipse, the difference between totality and not totality is night and day. Even at 99% you can't take the eclipse glasses off. The closer you get the more of the secondary effect you can see, like the crescent shadows, and the overall dimming. here is an interactive map. The percent for each of the lines is on the right and bottom.
10A is a pretty big ask. You might want a few more pins to spread that current around. What are you other pins used for. DE-9 is where I would probably start.