The image is a particle system-based fractal made by acerola, shown on this video at 31:56
The image is a particle system-based fractal made by acerola, shown on this video at 31:56
I have a Galaxy M35
It’s fine, but when it’s not playing something and the screen is off I can’t change the volume, which is really stupid.
Sometimes I’ve got earphones connected and press play on them and the volume is loud, but I can’t just pause and lower it, I have to: pause, grab the phone, unlock it and only then lower the volume. At least it should be a setting.
TCP is the way that you send information, HTTP is what it means.
The difference, in your case, is the port. You can’t CAN have TCP and UDP on the same port, but you can’t have the same protocol on the same port.
edit: I didn’t knew you could have different transfer protocols on the same port, ty!
games, specifically far cry 2, 3 & 4 and overwatch. And punk shows, getting beaten up in a mosh while very drunk is truly refreshing/entertaining
I imagined a red dodgeball on a small brown table. The person was just a thick stick figure and when the ball fell it bounced.
The color and shape I didn’t actively choose, they cam be different, but I guess my brain has defaults.
The ball falling and bouncing, however, I had to actively think about, the same way I have to think about texture. I don’t have to think about where the ball would stop, or how much it would bounce tho.
How else would you open a program?
It’s a great threat
also it’s food
A day before I got in a guy set fire to the trash in the chapel. So I befriended him immediately!
A programmer I know wrote a small paper about this
we ended up not needing infinitely regrowable teeth
Good point
maybe I underestimate how we will be in 100 years. maybe you overestimate it
But it’s a cool ideia nonetheless
it’s a cool idea, but probably not a good one
Too much money would be spent to simply get people from point A to point B faster
and why do it this fast? these reasons outweigh the price to build such a thing?
It may not work directly, but there’s always a way to misdirect it, like a vm!
For me The Rust Book was useful for discovering features of the language, not to discover how to code with Rust