I really love the --virtual
of Alpine’s apk system.
I really love the --virtual
of Alpine’s apk system.
So we can write Macro viruses in two languages now?
I would expect them to watch at the lowest volume level. The “muted” icon on screen would me annoy too much.
The silver ring below the black plastic secures the thermostat to the valve. If you loosen that screw, it will release pressure on the valve which in turn opens -> heating starts. It is rather tricky to fasten that ring again unless you can turn the thermostat to MAX though. Is the silver ring tight right now?
From my POV, I would say you are good. The dangerous blue and black wire are covered and yellow-green being exposed is not an issue. If you only have responsible persons in the house, you can turn it on without issues. You could also tape card board over it if you want to.
But keep in mind I’m not an electrician and give only my layman’s POV.
It usually says this on the label, at least in my country it has a phrase like “Store refrigerated after opening and consume within a few days”.
If it has no instructions or you are unsure, I’d default to yes, put them in the fridge after opening.
Out of curiosity, what turned you away from Firefox?
Might be related to long TTL on DNS entries making it hard to connect one failure to a thing you changed days ago.
Depends. Could be links on Lemmy have the rel="noreferrer"
attribute set. (Can’t check, im online from mobile)
I would go nowhere near a drenched feline since the most common version of them is likely in a very bad mood due to being drenched.
PlantUML supports Gantt charts if I remember correctly. Can run locally (java if I’m not mistaken) or via web.
I think you shouldn’t bother. First, as another user already said, the normal user does not look much at the address bar. Second, how will you work with deletions? Say user created 4 categories 1-4 and deletes category 2. Now you either have a hole or you “reindex” the categories to 1-3, which is probably bad since it breaks any bookmarks the user created.
Cool idea but lack of natural light could be an issue.
“direct heat transfer” would require submitting the vegetables directly in the cold water since the air around the food is a terrible heat conductor. And the carefully cooled air gets replaced partially once you open the lid.
I think this type of cooling is known in the western world as well for long time. Usually in the form of unglazed terracotta jugs for cooling drinking water. It just turned out refrigerators are way better and faster at it, so the good ol’ jug went into the museum.
So they discovered cooling by evaporation?
I think they didn’t even go inside because scared.
clickops
I think I will steal this.
Ah, the horcrux technique.
I am in this post and I don’t like it.