See also https://lemmy.world/u/p1mrx
https://bonsaimirai.com/species/dwarf-black-olive-bonsai
See pictures 3, 5, and 6 in the gallery. The perfect hexagon shape seems to be artificial.
cars left in the lot will have immediate search and rescue
Why do they have a lot, if parking there is considered an emergency?
Then it would be a total loss. Nothing’s out there.
It’s not over 'til it actually sinks. If they can tow it back to port, it might be repairable instead of a total loss.
Why is that humorous? The googles do nothing.
Here is the building on Street View:
It’s been knocked down and replaced since 2015.
I would suggest shijw as an abbreviation.
The difference is, Elon Musk sometimes thinks that it would be pretty neat if his private jets were electric. When has Taylor Swift ever done that??
I’ve literally never had this happen with a toilet made this century, but if you’re buying one it doesn’t hurt to check the MaP rating.
I found them via IP address, so I don’t know anything about the company beyond that.
2a09:: 2a11:: and 2409:: are the shortest.
I listed the 5 possible digits. What’s missing?
IPv6 subnet masks are long, but super easy because of hexadecimal. A bunch of F
s, then [
then a bunch of ]?0
s.
https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/family-laughing-at-crying-child-opening-christmas-present
That includes some history, but not the prompt itself.
GNU style is logical, because braces are syntactically a single statement:
while (x == y)
func1(); // can be replaced by { ... }
However, I prefer to entirely avoid unbraced single statements after while/if:
while (x == y) {
func1(); // easy to add func2(); later
}
Although this is ok when it fits:
while (x == y) func1(); // brevity!
sell off 5 of them for twice what they were worth
Technically she was selling for twice the retail price. An item is worth whatever someone is willing to pay for it.
So your threat model assumes an actor with a quantum computer capable of breaking RSA, but not a regular computer capable of filtering by IP address?