1/4 IPA, 3/4 lager
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1/4 IPA, 3/4 lager
π mph is roughly e knots.
Nice try, law student. Take your own notes!
Why not both?
The concern was that it uses a “liquid metal” thermal interface, and that if the system overheated while vertical it could migrate away from the hot zones. This is a potential issue with thermal grizzly’s liquid metal product, requiring occasional maintenance. Apparently the ps5 doesn’t have that issue.
While the understanding would be nice to have, I suspect it is more a lack of backbone than anything else.
But 0x80
is how you’d normally express 128 as hex. So it’s relevant. But deliberately confusing.
And hopefully you never will
It was IBM’s binary to character transform. DB2 can still use it if you configure it to do so. Or was at least as of the version from 1998 that I had to replace.
I would have pegged EBCDIC for that, but ok
I sincerely hope that if they come up with a 128bit instruction set they call it “x80” to maintain backwards compatibility with previous set names and be deliberately confusing to everyone.
Thank you!
I was more referring to food safety, as neither vinegar nor acetobacter will make you sick. Unpleasant, sure, but safe to drink.
At my age, I’d probably rather the onion rings.
Alcohol can’t expire, expiration is a part of how it’s made. In most of these cases the expiration date is actually for the container.
If the container looks fine and nothing has gotten into it, it’s no more dangerous to you than alcohol normally is. Same goes for vinegar and many other similar things. For example honey can’t go bad in a sealed bottle, but the bottle can degrade and let things in.
Sorry, not just implication; she was straight up talking about that.
I love it. You can’t see me because I can’t see you!
Don’t you tease me with The Doors of Stone, even in a hypothetical.