I’m always astonished that those shitty theater recordings are even a thing. Just wait a few months and you’ll be able to get the movie in good quality.
I’m always astonished that those shitty theater recordings are even a thing. Just wait a few months and you’ll be able to get the movie in good quality.
It’s always useful to add another machine to your botnet.
Reminds me of the time I went from being a PHP developer to being a PHP developer.
I’m not too familiar with Bottles. But for Media Foundation troubles one usually uses the Proton or Wine versions by Glorious Egroll. I think ProtonUp-Qt is able to get that for Bottles as well.
You can also get your personal free API key, insert that in Infinity and compile it yourself. Even Infinity’s dev who plans to make a paid version for the Play Store has given advice on how to do that on the Infinity sub.
I bet it won’t be long until someone makes that configurable in Infinity itself.
Usenet is a very old part of the internet. I think it predates the world wide web. It’s basically a message board. Which boards (like subs) exist on there is democratically decided. At least that was how it was done in Germany. For example, when there where too many Star Wars posts in the Science Fiction group de.rec.sf they decided to create one for Star Wars under de.rec.sf.starwars.
The actual content resides on newsservers around the globe. When you pass a message to one of them it is distributed around the globe to all the other servers. It’s similar to how Lemmy works, with the difference that with Lemmy content is only passed around when someone is actually subscribed to a particular community.
But many news servers don’t pass around messages that contain files. Because that would take up too much space. To get access to the servers that do pass around files you have to pay for the service. That is actually used for piracy nowadays.
Back in the days you could actually get access to usenet from your ISP. At least to the text only portion. Don’t know how you’d do it nowadays. It’s mostly fallen to obscurity.
They shouldn’t be able to know which posts were deleted in good faith either. But here we are. I bet undeleting user content is a big fat GDPR violation. Just gotta find someone who cares enough to sue.
I meant, post the image of your comment on Reddit so that the automod can’t block the text.
Post your image instead of text content.
They could undo that as well. My current plan is to get all my data via GDPR request, host it on my server so that my useful posts and comments don’t get lost forever and then order them to delete all my stuff via a GDPR request.
Ugh, thanks, of course. Stupid brain.
Can someone explain this? I mean, the last result. Usually I can at least understand Javascript’s or PHP’s quirks. But this time I’m stumped.
PHP isn’t open source? Damn, for some reason I can’t take back my contribution.
Wait, did I just reply to a three years old post?