It's called a coif. They also serve a critical part in terms of shock absorption.
orvorn
They do! To make sure their psychologically unstable enough to be trained as special forces.
As a fellow 2080ti owner I love my Steam Deck.
For standard corporate stuff I shoot at 70mm. For creative stuff I've shot from 24mm to 200mm.
Are Ubiquiti devices still the best value for homelabs and small businesses these days?
The only good printer is a dead printer.
Two great games that are perfect for Steam Deck - Hades and Hollow Knight.
I've participated in in-person protests with various groups about a dozen times a year since 2020 and I don't even live in a city. People are definitely out here protesting, we just don't get any media coverage at all unless we break things.
edit- in an attempt to actually be helpful - search the internet for any progressive or socialist activist groups near you and sign up for their newsletters/follow their socials. Try to attend a few events, and there you'll hopefully meet people who can get you connected to local anarchists/more radical folks who go out and protest a lot. Then you can carpool with folks and share expenses and have a safe group of people to go to protests with.
You're not entirely wrong but the Pal system itself has a good amount of depth - Pals have traits and skills, and are weaker or stronger against different other types of Pals, so you can be very clever about what skills you teach them and what fights/environments you take them into. The game can get very easy if you exploit this system properly but is quite challenging if you ignore Pal stats and just grind levels and gear.
This may be helpful
https://www.dndbeyond.com/posts/778-new-players-guide-how-to-play-d-d-one-on-one
Enterprise grade MFD printers often have a lot of features that don't get detected/mapped automatically, such as finishing options like staples and folding, as well as color management. I'm not a printer expert, I try to avoid them when possible, but I know that mass deploying those specific configurations in a safe and sane way seems basically impossible.
On the Fedora-based Linux machines, however, all of that seems to just pop in automatically, so I don't think it's a CUPS problem.
I quit cold turkey about 5 months ago after smoking for a decade. Might start again, might not. I still get cravings. If I do start again I'm going to make myself learn to roll them by hand instead of buying packs so that it's cheaper and takes more conscious effort.