

It’s like you start a game and within a blink of an eye, 5 hours have passed.
Great game
It’s like you start a game and within a blink of an eye, 5 hours have passed.
Great game
Especially painful on steam deck. If you get it working, it adds a good minute to the launch time
Maybe it’s not automated and whoever is responsible isn’t awake yet.
Your user is still linked to your home instance. If that goes down, you don’t have access to it. You can still browse Lemmy from other servers.
It’s really useful for programming. It’s not always right but it has good approaches and you can ask it to write tedious parts of your code like long switch statements. Most of my programming problems were solved because I just explained the problem like Rubber Duck Debugging.
You got it pretty much on point. Shooting a laser at atoms is like shooting a machine gun at an indestructible target. If it moves towards you, you can slow it down. But preventing it from accelerating when the target is stationary is where quantum mechanics comes in. That is your explanation: The laser light only acts as a force when the light is resonant with the atom and the Doppler effect means that the resonance condition changes depending on the speed of the atoms.
Given that you probably are using pointers, and occasionally you are allocating memory, smart pointers handle deallocation for you. And yes, you can do it yourself but it is prone to errors and maybe sometimes you forget a case and memory doesn’t get deallocated and suddenly there is a leak in the program.
When you’re there, shared_ptr is used when you want to store the pointer in multiple locations, unique_ptr when you only want to have one instance of the pointer (you can move it around though).
Smart pointers are really really nice, I do recommend getting used to them (and all other features from c++11 forward).
Adding to what DmMacniel said, it’s a hardware interface, often accessed via a USB port (which after all, is the universal serial bus).
As a computer science problem it ends at position = window center / 2 - object width / 2
Because everyone can spin up their own irc server. It’s not federated though.
There’s also IRC
Mozilla has been building gecko for decades, why would they cave to a conglomerate and invalidate their principles?
Debian stable is always outdated and testing is not stable enough. I think Debian is good for servers but not for desktop.