Ah yes, I'll just replace all my power sockets, get rid of all my electronics, and only buy imported European electronics from now on.
It's so obvious, why didn't I think of it before.
Oh yeah, and rewire my whole house to 240 V. Easy peasy.
Ah yes, I'll just replace all my power sockets, get rid of all my electronics, and only buy imported European electronics from now on.
It's so obvious, why didn't I think of it before.
Oh yeah, and rewire my whole house to 240 V. Easy peasy.
I'm waiting for Outlook (Taylor's Version).
But you can delete your copy, ask others nicely to delete theirs, and refuse to accept more copies of the same thing.
I'm not sure if Lemmy supports any of this, but it seems pretty important for e.g. child porn.
If the earth is fixed (not just in position, but in rotation), you're using a non-inertial reference frame, and things get wonky. But you can make the math work.
I don't understand this chart. It states that all plastic ever produced is either single use or still in use. What about non-single use plastic that is no longer in use?
Where does a broken tv fall on this chart, for example?
By vertical tabs do you mean tabs on the side instead of the top? If so, check out the tree-style tabs extension, it's great.
Your white led is a blue led with a phosphorescent coating.
Are you not aware that we have been heavily involved with this conflict for a very long time?
I'm saying we (all of us) should find it absolutely unacceptable that these legal risks exist.
I'm sorry, but that's a shit take. If someone wants to have kids, they shouldn't worry about legal trouble in the case of miscarriage. Full stop.
No one should be okay with the government having this much overreach.
Why isn't there a way for Linux users to automatically install every missing dependency for a program?
There is; actually there are several. Every^* distribution has a package manager, that's what it does. But you have to make a package for the program, similar to what the tegaki folks have done for Mac and Windows.
Another option is to statically link everything.
One issue is the fragmentation; because there are so many Linux distributions, it's hard to support packages for all of them. This is one thing that flatpack aims to solve.
I would expect this to be an issue for old closed-source software, but not for old free software. Usually there's someone to maintain packages for it.
Some cursory searching shows no tegaki package on flathub or in nix (either of these can be used on any distro; the nix one is surprising to me; it hosts soooo many packages).
But I do see it in Debian: https://packages.debian.org/search?suite=default§ion=all&arch=any&searchon=names&keywords=tegaki
Use soy milk to make it a 4 bean soup.